since 2015. and before that, covered the team for 18 years for the boston globe and espn. a couple of protocols we use with zoom, the program will run 45, 50 minutes with our panelists speaking. we ll then open it to the audience for q&a. you can use the q&a function at the bottom of your screen if you would like to participant in the q&a, and type in your question. we should be able to read the question and get to as many of them as we possibly can. we ll try to get through as many as are possible but with over 150 people attending the webinar, we may not be able to get to all of them. so thank you all for joining us. without further ado, i will toss this off to gordon. hi, gordon. kevin, thank you so much, and welcome, everyone. catherine told me just before we started that if i do one more presentation at mass historical, i won t be eligible for health insurance. so i m hoping to stick around for a sixth next year. needless to say, i wish we were in different circumsta
john sununu who served as george h.w. bush s white house chief of staff and andrew card, who was chief of staff for george w. bush. they discuss the father and son s leadership styles and approach to world events such as the fall of the soviet union and 9/11. i want to welcome you to nole wood farm, and i m terribly happy to have andy card and governor sununu in this room. this stage has welcomed over the last 100 years some very interesting people, and tonight we re making history to learn about some of the inner workings of the white house, but i want to mention there have been pundits, there have been professors actually, there was a professor here a couple of months ago who led a group of us to egypt, 87 of us to be precise, and he s the professor that s pushing back the dates of the pyramid and the sphinx like 10,000 years, which i think is wonderful. there s also been a very famous writer by the name of samuel clemens who was here, mark twain, and my father remember
good morning welcome to squawk box. i m becky quick with joe kernen and andrew ross sorkin we ve been on a bit of a winning streak up four days in a row. yesterday the dow was up this morning, you are seeing a little pull back dow down s&p down and nasdaq off by 172 yesterday, goldman sachs helped. good news from moderna godm goldman came out with much better numbers than anticipated. also looking at the trezy yield. the 10-year is sitting about 0.622% good morning. as joe mentioned earlier the twitter shares are lower after the company showed dozens of users were part of a twitter hack targeting some employees who had access to systems and tools. among those hacked joe biden, jeff bezos, bill gates, elon musk all telling users to send massive amounts of bit koip to an address they are diagnosing the problem and will share everything once the picture becomes more clear if they got in through employees with tools and access to accounts that raises questions about security
now, they say they have a little more than $102 million in the bank. we begin here with trump 2020 communications director tim murtagh on the money raise. happy new year to you. happy new year to you, blake. blake: those are big numbers. you guys reported 46 million in q4. 143 million raised for the year. a little more than 100 million in the bank. those are big numbers. this is the most amount of money a presidential election campaign in history. $142 million. more than george w. bush or barack obama, preceding their elections. that is a big number. that is the most important number. we have $102.7 million in the bank. blake: essentially a profits of a is about. you bring in fund-raising. spend stuff on rallies and events going forward. what will you use it on then? beauty, the money we re talking about in the fourth quarter, the cash on hand, this is not even to count what the rnc raised as well. when those numbers come out for the fourth quarter, you will see a reall
have to say robert survives and makes something happens. so thank you all. up next from the robert caro symposium held in conjunction with the new york historical society s exhibition of his papers turn every page inside the robert caro archive it s the keynote address by the author himself. welcome again to the beautiful robert h. smith auditorium. whether you re joining us in person or via live stream, i ve delighted to welcome another new york historical trustee who s joined us. our chair elect, agnes, i d like to thank you for all you ve done on behalf of new york historical, and all the good work, great work i know will happen under your leadership of our boards. so thank you for that and welcome. our keynote lecture today is turn every page, and it will be delivered by historian and biographer robert a. caro, reflecting on the poignant, exerating, thrilling experiences that have shaped his prolific career. the program lasts an hour, and it will include a question