she knows what she is talking about. thank you, my friend. today, a full jury in panel at donald trump s controversy case. a full jury. to be some civic, 12 jurors. before the trial can get underway, the court still has to pick five more alternate jurors. with the pace this is going, that could very easily happen tomorrow, putting this trial on track for opening statements to start monday. or some of those seated jurors could drop out tomorrow. because it has not been an entirely unprecedented scenario. before the jury grew today, it shrink. today started with two already seated jurors being excused, being removed from the jury. the first to be excused was juror number two. to understand why you first have to understand what has been happening in conservative media. i believe that no matter what they do here, this is a hate donald trump jury. this was like the breakfast club. in other words, that could be dicey. and in the daily news, the daily news is the most anti- tr
atlanta is the only facility in the u.s. that has giant pandas, but it too could soon lose them. wolf? brian todd reporting. thanks, brian, very much. erin burnett outfront starts erin burnett outfront starts right now. captions by vitac www.vitac.com outfront next, ivanka trump doesn t recall the former trump org executive vice president under oath repeatedly saying she didn t remember key details about the family business she ran. with me tonight a top trump business reporter who was there in the courtroom, former trump white house lawyer ty cobb and omarosa manigault newman. plus, israel tonight says it s destroyed 130 hamas tunnel shafts. we have a special report of what s inside those tunnels. the spider web crisscrossing underneath gaza, and what that underground warfare looks like right now as the death toll mounts in gaza. and trump s opening up about a potential vp pick. could it be that guy? let s go outfront. and good evening. i m erin burnett.
[inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations] this is the tv on c-span2 television for serious readers, here is our primetime lineup tonight at 7:00 p.m. you are in burton newborn arguing that the first amendment was created to protect the democratic process and not individual right. and at 730 pm patricia kelly talks about how poor people in baltimore are treated by the government. and then the argument that china is not taking over the united states as a supreme global power. and then we have grover more quests discussing his critique with the american enterprise institute. and we wrap up barf primetime lineup with robert putnam who questions whether the idea of the american dream is dead in his books. our kids. . that all happened tonight on c-span2 on booktv. here is a look at the upcoming book fairs and festivals happening around the country. the san antonio book festival taking place today. look for some of the festival s programs to air on booktv in the comi
box. but no, no, no. i m very happy and honored to be here with such a distinguished set of scholar and an even lovelier audience. thank you so much to bill and to the white house historical association, to the u.s. capitol historical society and, of course, james madison s mountpilyer for having me here. the slogan don t give up the ship, the figure of uncle sam, the star spangled banner, the proliferation of symbols that emerged from the war of 1812 constitutes a paradox. though, as this conference demonstrates, much recent scholarship on the causes, conduct, and legacies of the war has produced fresh insights about the costs and gains of the war, even the combatants. at the time the treaty was signed, americans understood that peace gained them little and policy, international power or territory. so on the one hand it seems contradictory that such a wealth of symbolism emerged at such a fectless endeavor. on the other hand, the very futile nature of the war. the victory
and the constitution that will reflect adaptability and great persuasion mad sentence had. an interesting capstone to two days of i think what we all can agree has been just a tremendous group of presentations. so the first speaker that will be coming up this afternoon is kenneth r. bowling. kenneth received his phd from the university of wisconsin. his specialty is the creation of the is all about the creation of the federal government during the revolution. he s been very active and interested in particularly researching the seat of government. he s been the author of many book and articles. throughout most of his professional life, he s been the co-editor of documentary history of first federal congress. i do want to say one thing about one of his books, which i think is a real classic now, that s the creation of washington, d.c., which is published back in 1991. if anybody wants to know about behind the scenes and proceedings and meetings and all the things that went on