minnesota. even then he only lost that my less than half a percentage point. it was a landslide. it was a mandate. it was also 40 years ago. in some ways seems longer than that. since reagan s revolution republicans have won the white house four times but only when the popular vote twice. tonight, we will examine today s republican party on the evil of a presidential election. what does the party believe? what does the republican position on the economy or foreign-policy or cultural issues, how has the party changed, where is it going, california, new york where the popular vote be in play again for republican nominee or does winning require running the electoral college got let. we are joined today by four people who have worked in or around politics for decades. they are very likely to have different views on some issues or may prioritize issues differently. they may represent different orthodoxies within the party but they have come together to discuss policy and politics
minnesota. even then he only lost that my less than half a percentage point. it was a landslide. it was a mandate. it was also 40 years ago. in some ways seems longer than that. since reagan s revolution republicans have won the white house four times but only when the popular vote twice. tonight, we will examine today s republican party on the evil of a presidential election. what does the party believe? what does the republican position on the economy or foreign-policy or cultural issues, how has the party changed, where is it going, california, new york where the popular vote be in play again for republican nominee or does winning require running the electoral college got let. we are joined today by four people who have worked in or around politics for decades. they are very likely to have different views on some issues or may prioritize issues differently. they may represent different orthodoxies within the party but they have come together to discuss policy and politics
welcome to all of our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. i m paula newton here ahead on cnn newsroom. we put the citizens of america first. we didn t do it by taking the easy way. u.s. house speaker kevin mccarthy taking a victory lap after the house passes a bill to raise the debt ceiling but it s liz leadership now in jeopardy. plus one of our show s most decorated soldiers loses a defamation case against several newspapers. we will go live to sydney for the latest. no letup and russian airstrikes on kyiv. there s been a another overnight missile attack on ukraine capitol. live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom, with paula newton. so it hasn t been easy but the hard-fought deals to suspend the u.s. debt ceiling and not a catastrophic default is now headed to the senate this bite weeks of handling and hanging, it clear the house. but you know it was a comfortable bipartisan margin? more than 300 voting yay at 117 nays. conservativ
upcoming elections, you re watching fox and friends first, i m todd piro. ashley: i m ashley strohmier in for carley shimkus. musk says governments should have contingency plans to deal with artificial intelligence. systems like chat gpt are capable of writing just as well as most humans and faster. what is the timeline here? what point does it change society, do you think? i think it starts to happen probably an impact this year. it is very past the point of what most humans can do. most humans cannot write as well as chat gpt and no human can write that well that fast. todd: this year, you ready? brooke singman hear from part two of musk s exclusive interview. brooke: elon musk warning artificial intelligence can influence future elections. watch this. raise concern of ai being significant influence in elections and even if you say ai doesn t have agency, it is likely people will use ai as tool in elections. if ai is smart enough, are they using the tool or is
before appendix. this week we ll examine one pernicious aspect of trump s efforts to stay in power, in chapter five, cool in search of a legal theory. the chapter details the lengths to which donald trump, his lawyer john eastman, knowingly pushed an illegal scheme to have then vice president mike pence unilaterally throw out joe biden s victory and hand the presidency to trump s. yesterday we spoke to committee member jamie raskin of maryland about the criminal referrals the committee made against trump in some of his closest allies and why he thinks trump is likely to go to prison for his attempted coup. and while the report does an excellent and thorough job of centering donald trump s culpability, as the main first, as the man first and foremost responsible for the attempted coup an insurrection, it also extensively catalog several some of his key enablers played in facilitating his corrupt scheme. like the aforementioned john eastman, the cool mentioned earlier, as well