his hands were up. he never once pointed that gun at a single police officer. this is why we need that independent investigation. the heartbreaking interview with his parents, as they push elected officials for answers. and scientists discover an increasing number of asteroids flying close to earth. whose job is it to protect the planet? the answer might surprise you, as we say good morning. it is sunday, november 21st. i m kendis gibson. and i m lindsey reiser. take a live look right now at several airports. we are tracking, of course, a busy travel weekend. i m sure you can guess. which one is this? that was newark. i think i think this is l.a.x.. all right. i didn t know there was going to be a pop quiz at 7:40. and of course, washington, d.c., it s going to be a busy, busy travel week ahead, busier than it was obviously last year, because of the pandemic. everybody wants to get out and see their families. we re going to be tracking everything. we h
21st. i m ali velshi. the bipartisan infrastructure bill has been signed into law by president biden and congressional democrats are optimistic about passing the build back better spending package before the end of the year. after passing the house entirely along party lines on friday, the transformative legislation is now headed to the senate for review this week, but it still has a difficult road ahead. its passage in the senate is not guaranteed. it will need all 50 democratic votes, and if it does pass, it might come out looking very different, based on the mercurial moods of joe manchin and kyrsten sinema, but at least it s moving. however, another crucial piece of the biden agenda, the agenda of anyone who cherishes democracy, by the way, has largely stalled, and i think it s voting rights. the washington post reports that kyrsten sinema, quote, remains firmly opposed to changing federal election laws on a partisan basis, signaling that a planned last-ditch voting rig
Biden signed a $1 trillion infrastructure deal on monday, launched his second signature spending bill over a big hurdle on friday, celebrated his 79th birthday on saturday, and now he s repeatedly telling allies he will run for re-election in three years. we re going to have the latest on the biden agenda and the path ahead for embattled democrats. plus, while kyle rittenhouse s attorney is calling some of his client s republican supporters disgusting. and then, how at least two attempted breaches of county election systems are connected to donald trump s favorite foam pillow ceo. the man who spent millions of dollars pushing the disgraced ex-president s big election lie. and why only one in three americans believe that the supreme court is acting to uphold the rule of law. velshi starts now. good morning to you. it is sunday, november the 25