pouring in. the pressure is on and the gloves are off. john, obviously i wasn t clear enough for you to understand this. here s a man that spent more than $20 million of his own money to try to buy that seat. you and donald trump were the masterful covid deniers. you re poorer and less safe because of kathy hochul and extreme policies. with 13 days left, candidates from both parties are scratching, clawing for every last vote. and there s going to be a lot of votes if the pre-election day ballot numbers are any indication. let s start in pennsylvania today. democrat john fetterman and republican mehmet oz facing off in their only debate, some accommodations were made as fetterman recovers from a stroke but both candidates had some bumpy answers. cnn s jessica dean is in harrisburg for us. how are the candidates cleaning things up today? reporter: even more than cleaning up the two are zeroing in on where they think the weaknesses are for the other campaigns from l
pick your race on this, is this resonating? is this enough to kind of set with voters who are very frustrated about the top line or frustrated about what they might be seeing at grocery stores? the president making clear earlier today in his remarks they feel like they re making progress. this will have real tangible effects for americans particularly in a time of high inflation. will it be enough to change their views? there s certainly a lot of work to do and white house officials know that, ana. phil, thank you. let s get right to matt egan with more on how this could make a difference for you. safe to say fees cost americans a massive amount of money every year, just how much are we talking? reporter: no one likes fees but it turns out they are not just annoying but expensive. a few examples. late payments, $12 billion. overdraft fees which is what phil was talking about, $15.5 billion in 2019 alone. hotel resort fees, airline baggage and change fees and this one is crazy, $2
given way. what we ve learned in this court document, many court documents is oan was encouraged to launch by at&t and was provided carriage fees, cable fees, exclusively by at&t. other distributors like comcart and charter don t carry oan so at&t is largely financing the channel. here s what at&t says though, a corporate spokesman tell me we ve never had a financial interest in oan s success and when at&t acquired directv we refused to carry oan and they sued us as a rough. we have a commercial carriage agreement now. of course, there s lots of channels that get carriage fees but oan is not your average channel. it s not really a news channel. it s full of propaganda and conspiracy programming, pushing the big lie and anti-vaccination messages. that s the difference, and the question then becomes does at&t have any standard, any line that it draws for what programming it s willing to carry even if
charged with trying to blow up an american airlines plane with explosives hidden in his underwear. he s acting as his own attorney. violence between egypt s christians and muslims may lead to new legal protection for religious minorities. a group described as thugs attacked christian protestors. that happened on sunday. at least 25 people were killed after the army and police got into the mix. well, egypt s prime minister says he s going to push a law that is making religious discrimination a crime. but experts say there is only so much that he can do during military rule. the problem, john, is we ve got 24 men, that s the supreme council of the armed forces. they re like the wizard of oz. they re behind a curtain. they re ruling egypt without any responsibility. so they have the power and no responsibility, and then you have this prime minister, a decent man, who has the responsibility but he s got no power. egypt has set parliamentary elections for november 28, and a