distinguished supreme court practitioner, laurence tribe. harvard historian, yell historian, and of course on this important night we are fortunate to hear from to law professors who are also practitioners, andrew weissmann, and neal katyal. neil katyal is of course a distinguished supreme court practitioner, having argued 50 cases before the court, and andrew weissmann is a former federal prosecutor and justice department official. my mission therefore in this hour is to get out of the way so that you can hear from them and not me. but i, want to take a minute to begin with two things that may reside more in the category of pet peeves than scholarly discussion that you are about to hear from our guests. one is that clarence thomas should ve recused himself from this case because everyone on that bench today knew, clarence thomas s wife was there. she was there, she was present when donald trump incited engaged in insurrection. the essence of our case is president trump s o
we know the fbt fears.i is polid . the doj has been weaponizedj ha. both organizations work hand in glove with both organizations, they work hand in glove with the democratic party to achieve and one common goal, and that is keeping conservatives out of power. people ask me all the time,im hannity, what areat conservatives? what are republicans supposed to dsupposedo? long story short, they have one option and one optioney only . h ave tothey have to win election. now, it is nearly impossible to make any sweeping changes when both the senate and the white house are controlled by democrats. so how did the democratic part . get so much power? they don t exactly nominateor s stellar candidatesel? let s be honest here. joe biden is kind of essentially a , well, a shadow of its former self. i ll be charitable, kamala harris is one of the least likable people on the planet earth. t eartshe shows next to zero leadership qualities and sadly, and it is sad, the newest member of the
seems like the whitehouse new about this but kept a tight lid on it. we re asking who knew it. we re with jacqui heinrich at the white house with what the administration is saying now and what aishah hasnie is saying that lawmakers want. wel welcome. welcome. this is neil cavuto. even with the markets closed, it s a busy day. we go to jackqui heinrich first is how the white house is handling docuworld. what we know is this was going on a full two months before the white house publicly disclosed it. that s after it was leaked to the press. critics are asking, what was the motivation to keep a lid on it and who made that call. who made that decision in ron klain make that decision? not to disclose? not to disclose. did ron klain make the decision? did the president make the decision to not tell the american people six days before the american election? another question, who had access to the material found in the president s garage. last night james comer formally ask
rival, reasserted communist party control over every aspect of chinese city. what we know is tomorrow when we see his top advisers revealed, is that he s going to be stacking it with his closest advisers and loyalists. so in this next term, expect xi jinping to double down on his ironclad rule, so a more authoritarian china at home and a more aggressive china abroad. fredricka? possibly more surprises. selina wang, thank you so much. all right. hello again, everyone. thanks for joining me. i m fredricka whitfield. with just over two weeks until midterm election decides who controls congress, voters are turning out in big numbers across the country to cast their ballots early. so far nearly 6 million people have already voted in the midterm elections. in georgia, more than 660,000 voter have already cast their ballots. that number is not far off the early voting turnout for the 2020 presidential election, and it s a quarter of a million more than the early voting turnout f
it s called christ of the ozarks. christ of the ozarks was the subject of a huge a suspiciously huge fund-raising operation by gerald l.k. smith. he died in 1976, but that statue still stands 1 in arkansas toda. but gerald l.s. smith is about to have another moment in the public eye because what he really wanted to be remembered for, even more than that statue, was a nationwide movement that he tried to build, a movement that he named and that he led and that he promoted tirelessly and that he wanted to outlive him forever. the motive behind the term christian nationalist is easy to define and simple to interpret. we believe that the destiny of america in relationship to its governing authority must be kept in thein hands of our own peopl. we must never be goonchd by aliens. we must keep control of our own money m and our own blood. in other words, we must remain trueor to the declaration of independence. that is nationalism. woe believe that the spiritual symbol of our s