pantheon anti and it ran as a campaign ad, not just as a video he put on his website or something. it ran as an ad, in 2006, where before he was up for reelection in the midterms that year. although you cannot tell from the text itself, when he was apologizing for was the role played by him and his office in one of the grosses congressional scandals in recent memory. he mentioned this guy named foley, that s mark fully who was another republican congressman. he served in the house at the same time as tom reynolds. in 2000, six mark reynolds resigned from congress in disgrace after he sent explosive messages and horribly explicit emails two teenage boys who were serving on capitol hill as congressional pages. these young assistance who work at the u.s. capital. that story first broke, the marks fully story broke in 2006 right before the midterm elections. the fact that congressman foley had been sending inappropriate emails to teenage boys, the public didn t know that, but i
we know the pandemic is far from over. we don t mean to ignore it. but this week was dominated by three different stories. all, with high stakes. voting rights. immigration. and gun control. first, voting. in georgia, tensions remain high over voting restrictions. today, hundreds of people gathered to protest an overhaul of the state s election rules. on thursday, governor brian kemp signed the republican-led bill into law. it sets new rules for absentee voting, and bans giving food or water to voters, who are in line near a polling station. civil-rights groups have already filed lawsuits, challenging this law. democratic state representative, bee nguyen, will join us in just a moment. as for immigration, yesterday, congressional democrats and republicans took dueling trips to the border. the influx of people seeking asylum shows no signs of slowing down. congressman joaquin castro of texas led a democratic delegation to a facility in carrizo springs. the lawmakers seemed sat
tonight, the breaking news as we come on the air in the west. supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg. john roberts saying our nation has lost a jurist jurist juristt stature. world news tonight begins now. good evening as we come on the air in the west. we begin with the breaking headline, the death of supreme court justice ruth bader ginsburg. a pioneer of women s rights and gender equality. she died surrounded by family in washington, d.c.
dominated by president clinton in 1993, she has had a number of health challenges in recent years. each time fighting and returning to the court. but we ve learned she passed away from complications of pancreatic cancer. she was 83 years old. what does this mean, 46 days until the presidential election? we begin with juju chang, and justice ginsburg, the indelible mark she left on the country. reporter: ruth bader ginsburg was a force to be reckoned with. all i ask of our brethren is that they take their feet off of our necks. repor
In recognition of the 15th anniversary of the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act, the Biden Administration has released a proposal that would prohibit federal contractors from using a job applicant's.