has thrown a no hitter. brian: somewhere in nashville i believe somebody is playing this song live. don t they play 24 hours a day? ainsley: there are like four band in one bar. every level. will: like nothing you will ever see. brian: we get our curfew lifted until midnight. allowed to stay up to any might. feel back to 8th grated grade. allowed to watch the monologue. many. ainsley: never stayed up to midnight. pete: you stayed up to midnightth grade? brian: i think so. i got to watch the monologue for johnny carson and my parents say why he is terrible at it. i should know, this what is the curfew in nashville in tennessee now. pete: i think it s 2:00. lives there a couple of weeks ago i think it s up to 2:00. brian: if you want that state to thrive keep the bars opening a little later. ainsley: you should know them all you made them famous and all have a bar in national. nashvil. brian: great tribute to veterans. ainsley: you can bay bottle of whiskey, is that what he
the 27 people who died making the crossing from france to britain yesterday comprised 17 men, seven women, two teenage boys and a young girl. the uk and france both say they want to prevent a repeat of what happened yesterday, but the british home secretary admits there is no quick fix . and more will come. in fact, today, in spite of the grim news circulating in the camps in northern france, there were still people willing to pay to get into these flimsy boats for the dangerous journey across the channel. this report from our europe correspondent nick beake. beside an abandoned train track in northern france, families desperate to resume their own journey to the uk, despite the horror of the last 2a hours. for now, more than 500 people call this camp home. among them, new arrivals, this family from iraq. their family has grown in the three years they have been on the road, trudging through more than half a dozen countries to get here. romania, after hungary, after france, a
good morning. i am jonathan capehart. and this is a sunday show. this mother s day. breaking news out of ukraine. first lady jill biden crossed into ukraine this morning, and dr. biden met with her ukrainian counterpart. olena zelenskyy. for two hours. at the school housing displaced people. before crossing back into slovakia, just moments ago. according to nbc news, this is the first time the ukrainian first lady has appeared in public since the war began. we will have much more on ukraine with retired general stuff later in the show. but first, here in this country, the clock could potentially rollback on 50 years of women s reproductive rights. something the majority of americans oppose. wednesday, the senate will vote on the women s health protection act of 2022. which would block an abortion rights before the supreme court could officially overturn them. the measure is expected to fail because of the filibuster. but the debate is a vital for true servicing these key fa
so, we learned what secretary of state tony blinken said to his russian counterpart to foreign minister lavrov, and it included a warning. further invasion of ukraine will mean swift and severe consequences. we want to begin though with all eyes on the white house ahead of a crucial mogot between the president and the two bipartisan heads of the senate judiciary committee. the topic, of course, the president s pick to replace justice stephen breyer on the court. we ve got nbc chief white house correspondent peter alexander and ally vitale and joined by david druccers, political correspondent for the washington examiner and contributing editor for vanity fair s the hive. and the author of in trumpos shadow. if only we knew the answer to what s next. the question is who will be the nominee, and where will there be, if any, holdups? what can we expect from this meeting happening just over two hours or now from now. reporter: yeah, that meeting is going to start here at 1:
ingraham angle thank you so much for joining me in moments my exclusive interview with the man of the moment speaker mike johnson who says the border bill is dead on arrival in the house. but, first, no, no, hell no. that s the focus of tonight s angle. we knew that it was finally released after being kept hidden from the public for months that the schumer mcconnell border insecurity bill would be bad, but even we didn t realize how bad. now, just last week we he was assuring critics, including the angle that what was leaks out about the bill were just internet rumors. including that the bill would permit up to 5,000 migrants per day into the country then senator lankford said this. this authority is a 5,000 authority to say if you get to 5,000, which we have been there every single day except for seven in the last four months, that it completely closes the border down. laura: wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. i thought that the 5,000 migrants could come, in welcome that,