welcome to politicsnation. tonight s lead, uncharted territory. right now, the week ahead promises to be an unprecedented one for our nation, which of course follows last week s unprecedented fbi search of donald trump s mar-a-lago estate. and the revelations that have followed since nearly a dozen sets of classified materials were retrieved from the former presidents home, as part of a federal espionage investigation. this weekend, we learned that a trump lawyer sent a letter to the justice department in june. claiming that all classified materials had been returned to the government. that s according to reporting from the new york times. according to four people with knowledge of that document. nbc news has not seen the document and is working to confirm the reporting. but today, top democrats in the house are calling for a damage assessment of those documents. trump s defense dubious claims of executive privilege and preemptive declassification. meanwhile, summon law enf
experts say this is crucial if humanity is to limit temperature rises to 1.5 degrees celsius above pre industrial levels. but island nations, which are hardest hit by climate change are not happy. they say their way of life is being threatened because there s not enough focus on cutting emissions in the short term. our climate editorjustin rowlatt reports from dubai. we waited and we waited and then. hearing no objection, it is so decided. ..with the bang of a gavel, the deal was done. applause and it got a standing ovation. so the hammer has just gone down here in dubai, and that was the fastest that an agreement text has ever been agreed. the presidency, dr sultan aljaber, he s calling this an historic agreement, but it is hedged around with questions and doubts. it calls on countries to contribute to ambitious actions to tackle climate change. now, i could do a single plate and claim to have contributed to doing the washing up, but would you consider that i had really pull
greg: yes! yes. it feels so good. it feels so good. you re like the audience version of a brazilian wax. [laughter] greg: it s friday so you know what that means. let s welcome tonight s guest. he s a one-man show but not by choice, comedian joe mackey. side job is reading off the pharmaceutical side effects in commercials. crime podcast, emily [applause] greg: he s from jersey so most of the talking tonight will be done by his hands, actor-comedian vince august. [applause] greg: she s like a thanksgiving turkey, about 20 pounds and extremely dry. new york times best-selling author and fox news contributor, kat. greg: all right. before we get to some new stories let s do this. greg s leftovers. greg: make an analogy. it s leftovers write read the jokes we didn t use this week and as always it s my first time reading these. so if they suck we ll season joe mackey with salt and pepper and feed him to a grizzly bear. why not? greg: all right. this week in d.c
up flames. but with that duty? it would destroy you. when you think of the it would destroy you. when you think of the poorest it would destroy you. when you think of the poorest countries, | think of the poorest countries, the people who are likely, who are being hardest hit by climate change. and with their voices are going to be heard at the kop 26 summit, do you worry that an up account will be taken of what they re going to? yes, very much so. i think it would be really catastrophic if the developed nations of the world, more powerful nations of the world simply ignored these problems. we can say is nothing to do with as and crossed her arms. we caused it. our kind of industrialisation is one of the major factors industrialisation is one of the majorfactors in producing this changing climate. we have a moral responsibility even if we didn t cause it we would have a moral responsibility to do something about thousands of men, women and children who have lost everything. lost
science. and it s my mission to prue it s not true. we do care deeply. we have a lot of good ideas ourselves. you have a huge mission before you. i assure you. study after study shows black, hispanic and indigenous communities are hardest hit by climate change. it s 3 degrees warmer than non-red line areas how will environmental equity be centered in your climate caucus. i think it s impossible to talk about improvements to the environment without positively impacting these communities. now we have to be careful. we know about where this power generation is created. but there s a host of ideas. i think one of the mistakes we have made as republicans is we re good at telling people away we don t like and don t want to do, but i m really ready