this culture is very educational for people. but i think we need to stop believing victims, we need to start believing the women. and i think those are strong words that the white house would probably take issue with. so that is why you are here. thank you all. that does it for us. mtp daily starts right now. hi, chuck. thank you for all of that. if it is tuesday, russia could be meddling right now. is anybody in the u.s. government watching? tonight the nation s intelligence chiefs say russia is targeting the midterm elections. and the white house isn t trying to stop it. has the president directed you and your agency to take specific actions to confront and blunt russian influence activities? not as specifically drektsed by t directed by the plus. plus the fbi director con are
a difficults tcontradicts the w claims about what they knew and when. and some democrats are pushing further left to battle president trump. is anyone even trying to hold the middle ground? thi
The latest news from around the world with hosts John Berman and Poppy Harlow.
18 times this month, 64 times in the last three months. i lay those numbers out because this is at the same time that the american public sort of approval of the mueller probe is declining. it was 48% approval in on how mueller is handling it in march. now it s 41%, the lowest it has been. is the president s strategy working? well, if his strategy is to undermine confidence in the justice department and the institution of the legal process, then, yes, it s working in some ways because he keeps calling this a witch hunt. he has the biggest bully pulpit on the planet. he is misinforming the public by saying mueller is employing 13 angry democrats. we don t necessarily know that any of these people are actually angry. the president is using his pulpit to punch down at the investigation. we are seeing the public react
to that. mueller, because he can t respond, that s why you see the numbers go down. the
Chris Cuomo asks the tough questions to newsmakers in Washington and around the world.
wild card? why? he picked his pal, kris kobach, over the party s choice, who has a slim lead in polls over kobach even though trump is backing him. the proposition is this. could trump put this governor s seat in play by picking the controversial kobach? you ll remember him of gu dayzy voter fraud fame. remember that commission to find fraud that found none? that s him. trump remembers the loyalty. the gop would like to forget he exists. it s also a crucial test for the other side. democratic centrists are fighting the growing progressive wing for the future of the party. then there s something i m calling the x growth factor. what can democrats do to peel off trump voters? what do i mean by trump voters? voters who are disaffected and who picked trump for being an anti-politician. what can they do for that? let s get after all of this right now with chief national correspondent john king monito
d.w. . this is t w news live from berlin and tens of thousands of people take to the streets across europe to protest against far right parties and show their support for the e.u. recent polls show nationalist and populist parties are likely to make major gains in the european parliament elections which begin this coming thursday also coming up in austria as president calls up elections after a corruption scandal forces the resignation of the country s far right place chancellor. and indian voters reach the finish line polls close on the final day of
the country s marathon a general election prime minister narendra modi is seeking a 2nd term. thanks for joining us tens of thousands of people have been rallying across europe ahead of the upcoming european parliament elections they re protesting against nationalist and far right parties and showing their support for a stronger and you recent polls show anti e.u. parties are likely to do well in the elections which kick off on thursday
mexicans would pay for it, to use the money to take land away from farmers and ranchers on the border of the united states. how can any conservative support this guy? senator, the definition of conservative has changed so fast in our lifetime it s unbelievable. we need a dictionary to keep up with it. senator michael bennet, democrat from colorado. thank you, sir. stay safe on the trail. that s all we have for tonight. we ll be back tomorrow with more meet the press daily. ari melber is picking it up. good evening to you. we begin here with breaking news rocking washington. moment of truth. house speaker nancy pelosi says that is what faces the nation tonight. right now as she stepped out and made this announcement just within the last hour. i m announcing the house of representatives moving forward with an official impeachment inquiry. i m directing our six committees to proceed with their
investigations under that umbrella of impeachment inquiry. the president must b
wesome. so come ask, shop, discover at your xfinity store today. top of the hour. it is an important warning.
good morning, everyone. i m poppy harlow in new york. i m jim sciutto, in front of the united nations, where president trump will take the stage and address leaders. he was here, live, addressing reports that he personally ordered a hold on $400 million on crucial military aid to the ukraine. listen to the answer. there is news in here. as far as withholding funds, those funds were paid. my complaint has always been, and i would withhold again and i will continue to withhold until such time as europe and other nations contribute to ukraine. they re not doing it the united states, we re putting up the bulk of the money. fact-check, this is money mandated by congress. and that is the first time he
said, that europe isn t paying their fair sure. it s completely opposite of what he said yesterday. let me quote for what the president said yesterday. the quote from the
narendra modi sworn in as the prime ministerfor a record third term. the party is just getting started as celebrations kick off around the world for pride month. welcome to the programme. it is sam welcome to the programme. it is 8am in singapore and at 2am in brussels, where we start. next exit polls suggest there have been big gains forfar right parties, in elections to the european parliament. this was the first projection for the 720 seat assembly the darker colours to the right representing those right of centre parties seem to have moved to take up more of the seats. the most headline grabbing outcome appears to have been in france, where the far right national rally party has taken more than 31% of the vote. that s more than double the coalition which supports president macron. he has responded by calling an entirely unexpected snap election. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a dangerfor our nation, but also for europe. the but also for euro
with the liberal democrats launching their manifesto later this morning. and coming up in business we ll be exploring the rise of swiftonomics as the billionaire pop star s eras tour gets under way in scotland. hello, i m sally bundock. a very warm welcome to the programme. we start in france, and in what s been described as a huge political gamble, the french president emmanuel macron has called a snap parliamentary vote after his alliance suffered a big defeat by the populist right in european union elections. mr macron said he couldn t ignore the result and dissolving parliament was an act of trust in the french people. the national rally party led by marine le pen is on course to win a record 32% of the vote in the elections for the european parliament. that s more than double the coalition which supports president macron. he responded by calling the unexpected snap election. translation: the rise - of nationalists and demagogues is a danger for our nation but also for
Nikki Haley warned constituents in New Hampshire last week that the U.S. must prepare for a war with China, whilst Trump told voters that he alone can keep the U.S. out of "World War Three."
Reelection in november? josh joins us now. with, that the national correspondent at bloomberg business week. it s great to have you back on the show. we will get the first question to elaine stewart. josh, you wrote basically the first book of a lot of trump books. readers came out first, about right wing populism the rise of right-wing populism. what commonalities do you see from the right wing populism that field trump and the new left wing populism and how difficult is it going to be for president biden to thread the needle and still keep keep progressives, but keep the centrists that helped propel him to victory in 2020? the big commonality is that there is a huge political backlash after the financial crisis, which, on the, write the story that i told in my last book was how that gave rise to steve bannon and donald trump. but the story i tell him that