It is good to be back with you on this second hour of chris jansing reports. At this hour, the bombardments around beirut. Massive Fire Balls as israel carries out some of its biggest strikes yet. A live report on that, and the disturbing new comments from irans supreme leader. Plus, hes the governor who Donald Trump torched as disloyal, bad, and very average but today, a reunion, four years in the making. Will it all be water under the bridge between trump and Brian Kemp . A blue Collar Pitch in the battle for the blue wall. Were live on the trail with Kamala Harris in michigan. And the second to last Jobs Report before the election is now out, and it is crushing expectations, weve got the numbers. Our Nbc News reporters are following all of the latest developments. We begin with nbcs Matt Bradley live on the ground in beirut. Matt, israel carried out one of the biggest bombardments yet. What do we know about what happened, what they were targeting . Reporter they were targeting what
Evolution. There are funding on this is not really keeping pace. Nick watt cnn los angeles abeer to tune in to an all new episode of the cnn original series, how it really happened anthrax, terror by mail. Thats tomorrow night at 9 00 p. M. Eastern right here on cnn welcome back to cnn this morning. It is 7 00 a. M. Eastern time here in our atlanta studios. And it is Kentucky Derby day we were talking about our horses are picked so i know you like a long shot. I do. Im gonna i always hope for the underdog. So grandma, the first and most second, i would pay well, ill go with west saratoga. What saratoga is going to be my horse. I spoke with the trainer. Oh, i spoke with the trainer. Hes going to be on first of all, coming out guy is a hobby or yeah, i just about the horse. Well, you are reading the names i liked resilience because good day. Yeah, im going forever young. So japanese horse, theyd never won the derby. Its got to happen at some point. So maybe maybe this is the year or its
without any demonstrable economic or actuarial or plain common-sense rationale, it frustrates. and it certainly is frustrating to have to mobilize every couple of months to keep our leaders from inflicting real human suffering on our constituents. but typically that s how progress is won. let s begin there. i have cnn s senior white house correspondent jeff zeleny with me in new york, tammy luby and david chalian there in washington. so good to see all of you, jeff, we just heard the bit that got the laugh about the 50th or 60th time congress tried to repeal obamacare, but big picture first. to hear him progress, i kept hearing the word progress over and over, quoting himself, yes, we can, and the applause. i mean it seemed like quite a difference from what we saw in
there were predictions of all sorts of shenanigans at polling places and there were definitely a number of incidents reported. investigations going on right now. we invited doug bush, a federal attorney to join us right now, on the phone with us. doug, good evening. good morning, jamie. it was a nail biter. yes. it was a rollercoaster ride. a number of things were reported. big picture first, what do you see that needs to change in order to let everybody who wants to vote vote, in order to make sure every vote is counted and to make sure we don t have any questions, ever, about a validity of an election result? well, you are always going to have a lot of problems. you are going to have military and absentee ballots. you are going to have problems with exactly how early voting works and how long it s going to last. you are going to have problems as you saw today, yamy, where the polls closed, if they said those who remained in line can vote. those are all controversial,
with a single industry since the 1998 tobacco deal. how much will it really help struggling home owners what about the housing market. will it help you? and a certified financial planner managing partner with car guile investment services and great to have you here. thank you. at first blush, this sounded like the greatest news every home owner getting a reduction in principle, lower interest rates and maybe a little check comes to you. big picture first. will it impact the housing market? well, the short answer is no. the settlement, even though it s 25 billion dollars is really rather modest and especially when you look at the huge 15 trillion dollar mortgage market. and as we step back and look at the settlement, the first part of it is very good, 5 billion dollars going to those victims of robo signing. now, remember, these aren t people that were improperly kicked out of their houses just denied due process, they were behind on their loans and deserve to lose their homes now