united states and around the world. i m fareed zakaria. today on the program, vladamir putin says the world faces the most dangerous decade since world war ii. will he make it more dangerous by using nuclear weapons? can he compromise and make a deal? i will ask boris bondarev, one of the highest level defectors from putin s own government. then britain has its third prime minister in less than two months. we will tell you what you need to know about rishi sunak and his plans. trust is earned, and i will earn yours. can he gave the economy? and the reputation of that storied nation? and as a divided america heads to the polls, what can we learn from the most divided period in american history? the civil war years. i sit down with john meacham who just published a new biography of abraham lincoln. but first, here s my take. history and current polling both tell us that the house of representatives will likely flip over to republican control in the november midterms.
this much legislative success. who s talking to chris wallace airs right after newsroom. it s a fundamental choice, a choice between two very different visions for the country. they re using the bully pulpit in a way that is promulgated hating. this is our year, the democrats can t run on anything they ve done. people don t like what they ve done. they re not interested in solving problems. they re interested in making you angry. and they re hoping that that will distract you from the fact that you don t have answers of your own. 1.3 million georgians have participated in the early voting process. look at the opportunity we have now. that could change a whole election, the power and privilege that we have. two americans are among the dead in a crowd surge that killed over 150 people in seoul. there were 4,100 missing persons cases filed. there are about 100,000 people out here last night. i told the crowd, you can t come this way. people are dying. i m p
A preliminary intent to allow a neutral third party, typically a retired judge, to review the documents. The former president s attorney claims a Special Master is necessary to ensure the Justice Department returns any of trumps private belongings and documents covered by Attorney Client privilege. But, the Justice Department has indicated it is already using an internal filter team to review everything which was seized by the fbi. For now, cnns Political Correspondent sara murray live now, sara, and broad brushstrokes, when we look at in terms of the spots from the doj . We are looking overall, in terms of the legal argument, the Justice Department opposing with donald trump is looking for, which is a Special Master, an independent third party to overview these documents. The Justice Department is saying look, after the search they did on the president s residence in maralago at august, theyve already gone through those materials. Theyve already had a filter team set up to remove any
for a showdown with the january six committee as one of his closest allies in the senate is forced to testify in a georgia grand jury investigation. then, it s her party, marjorie taylor greene no, longer fringe. inside her district as georgia early voting breaks records. and the scramble for a new leader in the uk as the stress steps down after just 44 days, and the warning sides flushing here at home, as the 11th hour gets underway on this thursday night. night. good evening once again, i m stephanie ruhle. the choice of the next president is bracing for what could be an explosive confrontation lawmakers investigating january 6th. the house select committee is set to be on the verge of sending donald j trump that subpoena for records and testimony. the vote to take that step was exactly one week ago, tonight. the washington post reporting this. lawmakers and community lawyers spent the last days, since last week s hearing, carefully crafting subpoena language closely studyi
i m yasmin vossoughian in for katy tur. we are going to begin with breaking news on capitol hill. we got a lot to get to. the january 6th committee officially subpoenaing former president trump, we want to go right to capitol hill as we re kind of weeding through this 10-page document that we re getting in the last few minutes or so. ali, let s talk about this. because we re looking at two specific dates, right? we have november 4th, in which the documents that were requested by the january 6th committee, from the former president, that is the due date. and then november 14th, on or about they say november 14th, they expect the president, the former president to show up for deposition testimony. what else stands out to you? what else can you talk us through with this? the dates are of course the dates that we will first pay attention to in terms of being able to see where the former president will be complying with this subpoena request. the fact that one comes before the m