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on january 6th. we were being told it could take days to clear the capitol, yet mitch is here. we will not go to the capitol after two, three days. we should do it here. tonight, congressman jim clyde born on their leaders in that room, joins me live. [inaudible] they re waiting for this. they re trespassing on the capitol building. i want to punch him out. i m gonna go to jail, but i would be happy. and congressman jamie raskin, of a trump response to this committee s subpoena. bless her response to the wild charge of governor barnes, the fbi set me up lieutenant governor mandela barnes, on what happened in wisconsin last night and what we learned from the herschel walker debate with senator raphael warnock in georgia tonight. we will see time and time again tonight, as we are already saying, that my opponent has a problem with the truth. when all in starts right now. good evening from new york. i am chris hayes. i gotta say, it is amazing ....
irwin joining us with. and kay la, i will start you with. at the windy white house there, as it relates to what we re hearing from the treasury secretary, and from cnbc language, to plain english here, what it means. well, it s significant because the treasury secretary is saying that as of early june, the federal government won t be able to pay its bills anymore. it s allowed by congress to borrow up to $31 trillion and change, but it s going to hit that number next thursday. after that point, treasury is going to be looking under couch cushions to try to finds some additional money. it will be pinching pennies. and it says it will stop contributing or investing into some federal workers retirement accounts, to try to conserve some of that cash in order to avoid reaching that debt limit, or not being able to pay for allies and adversaries that hold the u.s. debt. so certainly the treasury secretary is trying to call on congress and say we need a deal in the coming mo ....
and we have laid out very clearly what occurred and, again, don t want to get ahead of this. the department of justice, you all can will get your questions answered from them during this time and so i would just refer you to the department of justice and now as you all know there is a special counsel. thank you, korine. another one on garagegate. what is the white house trying to hide? nothing. someone gave the president a statement to read on tuesday that was incomplete at best, misleading at worst. who? so i have read out the president s statement. i have read it out yesterday and what he said. he said that he respects or he takes classified information and documents very seriously. that s what he said. he said he did not know that the records were there. he does not know what s in them. he said that. you heard from him directly on this and his team has been cooperating fully, fully and not only that, again, i ll say this, the attorney general said this hims ....
u.s. capitol. so why did you decide to march to the capitol? well, basically, you know, the president got everybody riled up, told everybody head on down. so we were basically just following what he said. after the president s speech as you are marching to the capitol, how did you feel? i was you know, i m angry. you know, after everything that was basically said in the speech, you know, a lot of the stuff he said he already put out in tweets. i ve heard it and seen it before. so i was already worked up and so were most of the people there. thursday a federal judge sentenced him to two years of probation for disorderly and disruptive conduct. he said now that i ve been sentenced, i want to again say that it was wrong for me to be inside the u.s. capitol and that i m sorry. like so many others, i hung on to every word donald trump said and he took advantage of us. my family and i have suffered, first for my bad judgment and then for speaking out. but if it he ....
like him after all to be fair he wasn t really a prosecutor better defense attorney masquerading as a prosecutor placing interest of defendants above everything else that is what is called is never the defendant s fault it s law enforcement or schools or society that is what the movement is to shift responsibility for crime away from the defendant and onto literally everyone else. i am not surprised he was recalled but i am surprised he was elected in the first place. what in the people of san francisco think they were getting? doing the opposite of why he said he did exactly what he said he would do he was soft on crime and hard on the police. he did not change. but the voters did. make you wonder how many people were victimized in the process and how many other cities will make the same mistake and how many lives that will cost? joining us now right on time director first of all happy birthday i actually think that our system can be improved. and the former prosecutor ....