biden s homes and also looking into documents at properties owned by former president donald trump and mike pence. so what are they finding out? we re all over it with democratic congressman john garamendi on why there could be more out there and larry hogan and how this could affect the presidential race, a race that he might join. we ll find out. welcome. i m neil cavuto. so much going down as again this pow-wow with the national archives continues. let s get the latest from aishah hasnie with more. as you heard from chairman comer, he s going to wait until the briefing wraps up. a few republicans have already popped out of the meeting to share their thoughts. they tell reporters that they feel like the general counsel for the national archives has been very thorough in their words, but they also feel like the national archives as an agency hasn t been playing fair when it comes to the trump and the biden documents. watch. the documents about president trump and his cla
trump knew that and we know it from the contents of hunter biden s laptop. but joe biden, as you may h recall, did not even respond. that s russian disinformation, he said. and then he went on the offense. disi your tax returns, biden. demand it. show us your tax returns. and of course, trump refused. biden, by contrast, already set up a website called joe biden .com to showcase his own recent tax returns because he had nothing to hide. unlike donald trump, you coulduo trusu t joe biden. m that was the message. now, whyy ar are we telling yout this tonight? why are we dredging up history when we re doing it? because two years later, the roles have reversed in a bewildering and pretty remarkable and kind ofwa hilarious way. so wey. now have donald trump s tax returns. house democrats grab them law and precedent and privacy be privacy and they release i them to the public becausead donald trump is orange and bad and has no protections under the bill of rights. so now that w
pushing the baby in a stroller on the upper east side near where i live one oh hooded gunmen came out from behind and put a bullet in her head at point-blank range. the baby is okay, but now without a mother. my wife, she sees the paper today and says, i don t feel safe. she says she wants to move. a couple of weeks ago a guy wearing all black with a knife chased a man down two blocks away from my apartment in broad daylight trying to stab him. we may have to get that concealed carry permit to that is now legal here. over in philly, my hometown, a 21-year-old woman went to a bar and never came home. kayleen holton was murdered by a psycho tuesday night he went on a shooting rampage, all because he was upset about being kicked out of the bar. so we came back and opened fire. she was a good kid, she worked. they were going to be here in about 15, 20 minutes, and that s when the case broke out and whenever this guy started shooting, when are people going to get fed up with thi
to prevent the peaceful transfer of power to president biden. the congressional committee has spent almost a year investigating the attack. now on bbc news, it s time for hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. when vladimir putin ordered his invasion force into ukraine in late february, is this the scenario he imagined for earlyjune? a brutal war of attrition in the donbas, a defiant ukrainian government deploying more heavy weapons from western allies, russian losses mounting, a punishing sanctions regime on moscow and more nato expansion in the offing? well, my guest, in an exclusive interview, is russia s ambassador to the united nations, vassily nebenzia. where does russia go from here? ambassador vassily nebenzia at un headquarters in new york, welcome to hardtalk. good afternoon, london time, mr sackur. it s a pleasure to have you on the show, ambassador. let me ask you this. after more than 100 days, would you say that russia s invasion of ukraine is going
independencde in 1960. this is the first of almost 80,000 artefacts that will be returned for display in museums in the drc. now on bbc news, hardtalk with stephen sackur. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. when vladimir putin ordered his invasion force into ukraine in late february, is this the scenario he imagined for earlyjune? a brutal war of attrition in the donbas, a defiant ukrainian government deploying more heavy weapons from western allies, russian losses mounting, a punishing sanctions regime on moscow and more nato expansion in the offing? well, my guest, in an exclusive interview, is russia s ambassador to the united nations, vassily nebenzia. where does russia go from here? ambassador vassily nebenzia at un headquarters in new york, welcome to hardtalk. good afternoon, london time, mr sackur. it s a pleasure to have you on the show, ambassador. let me ask you this. after more than 100 days, would you say that russia s invasion of ukraine is going to plan?