tomorrow. joining me live on set in a moment. should be great, i m glad he s here tonight, because of something happening in this final stretch of the midterms, but i want to talk to him about. something i think he can help us wrap our heads around. let s start with the great state of louisiana. so, every ten years there s a census, in the last census in 2020, it showed the same trend and louisiana those taking place across several southern states. over the last decade, the white population, shrank and the black population grew. why people are now less than 60% of louisiana s population, and about a third of the population there is black. and yet, this is louisiana s congressional delegation. five are white republicans. one is black democrat. because even though louisiana as one third black, only one congressional district has a majority black population. that s how state lawmakers drew the congressional maps. after every census, state lawmakers get to draw new maps. and
tonight on all in, we are going to be leading a revolution in congress. joe biden and his family will be a top target. two weeks from election day, the very real concerns of economic disaster if the radical right gains control of government. then, every day, i m dedicating to settle my resources, just to give people confidence that they can cast a vote safely. that is absurd. a share of a maricopa county is pushing back on voter intimidation in arizona, and he joins me live. plus, john rolston on the anti-democratic forces taking over elections in nevada, and why a new nepotism scandal has a certain fox news host lashing out at reporters. all in starts right now. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes. midterms usually favor the out of power party. big reason is that whatever problems there are at the time in the country, in the country that you re in, people go to the polls and it s easy to blame the party with control of government for it. it s almost a l
good evening, everyone. welcome to a very, very special edition of the reidout, live from the flying saucer draft imporium in ft. worth, texas. we re now just two weeks away from the midterm elections and the stakes could not be higher for the lone star state where everything from school board elections to the race for governor is dominated by the struggle to define what america is and who america stands for. texas is arguably the center of the u.s. culture wars. the red state that might be getting a little less red here and there where the consequences for this year s election are at a fever pitch. this is where the high-stakes abortion conversation we re all having right now began. when texas passed its bounty hunter abortion ban before the supreme court reversed roe v. wade. voting in texas is so restricted and anti-voter laws so effective, folks have dubbed it jim crow 2.0. more books have been banned from school libraries in this state than any other state, and this
midterms that i want to talk to him about, something i think you can help us wrap our heads around. let s start with the great state of louisiana. every ten years, there is a census, right? the last census in 2020 shows the same churned and louisiana that was taking place across several southern states. over the last decade, the white population shrink, and the black population grew. what people are now less than 56% of louisiana s population and about a third of the population there is black. yet, this is louisiana s congressional delegation. other states six members of congress, five are white republicans. one is a black democrat because even though louisiana is one third black, only one congressional district has majority black population. that s a state lawmakers drew the congressional maps. but after every census, state lawmakers get to draw new congressional maps and last year, despite those new census numbers showing a shrinking white population and a growing black pop
We may be getting a change. When students were punished by making them stand outside in the cold, parents were upset. Sia nyorkor went to Brimfield Elementary School near kent to get the answers. Reporter jennifer says students need discipline but not in this way. I am all for discipline and children. They need those, the boundaries that discipline provides but they should expect certain disciplines. When you give them something that they have thats outside of that, i think it makes them feel unsafe. Reporter wednesday recess monitors in kent made students stand outside as punishment for behavior on the playground. The students were already outside for recess but a concerned parent tells cleveland 19 students were made to stand in a line and told to stand still for over 15 minutes. On wednesday there was snow and temperatures were in the lower 30s and some places below freezing. I wouldnt like it. I would go talk to them and expect something was done and whoever made the decision to do