cultural and economic fallout. we have new information on that terrifying shooting at a missouri high school and how it could have been even more tragic when a 19-year-old stormed in with a long gun and hundreds of rounds of many ain admmunition. plus it s crunch time in the midterm campaign, two weeks to go, and warning signs of piling up for democrats as key races tighten, including one that do determine who holds the senate. tonight the nation will be watching as democrat john fetterman and mehmet oz face off in the only debate for that critical pennsylvania senate race. jeff zeleny is in harrisburg and athena jones is with us in new york following a closer than expected new york governor s contest. let s first go to the action in pennsylvania. jeff, what s the pulse there right now? reporter: there s no doubt this senate race has been a marquee race of the cycle. tonight s debate is a marquee event. th th it s the only time these two candidates will come face to fac
he will meet face-to-face with the king and crown prince, what changed? inside politics, the biggest stories, sourced by the best reporters now. welcome to inside politics sunday, i am abby. the top lawyer in the trump white house spent nearly 8 hours under oath with the january 6 committee on friday. pat cipollone is a critical witness to key episodes of the committee investigations, he was in the room during conversations about seizing voting machines, installing a new attorney general, and issuing last-minute pardons, and he was also with the president during the capital riot. january 6 committee member, so, told cnn that pat cipollone was careful, but candid. a committee spokesman, also says that pat cipollone testified about nearly every topic that they are investigating, and that he underscored trumps supreme dereliction of duty . it was videotaped so you can expect to see some of it in public hearings this week. let s discuss all of this and more with our panel, m
it cost a lot. that s critical. neil: five states holding crucial primaries. it s the one subject that unites voters. in alabama, arkansas, minnesota, texas and georgia, inflation and prices running ahead like crazy with no sign that that is cooling down. welcome. i m neil cavuto. this is your world. fox on top of a situation that is getting worse on the economic front with inflationary numbers out of control and in key states across the country having crucial primaries, that could affect the standard of bearer for the democrat and the republicans in those key races. growing talk now as to how this sorts out. we re also looking at the effect of the so-called trump bump and whether it carries today in crucial states across the country as well. let s go first to atlanta, georgia. we ll find our mark meredith following the key pocketbook issues dominating that voting. mark? good afternoon. the pocketbook issues impacting a lot of voters in their decisions today, a lot of r
democratic party. this is an intraparty squabble, that is starting to really reveal some tensions here, between the white house, and their own supporters who have just been pretty unrelentingly criticizing of president biden, his leadership, his actions, the white house in general. the white house is completely flat fed up and frustrated with that argument. their view is that democrats need to come together ahead of the midterms and roe the boat in the same direction, rather than engage in the circular firing squad over issues from gun rights, environmental issues, abortion rights, they want everyone to get on the same page and they are tired of this criticism. there is a kernel of truth to it especially when it comes to abortion because this decision leaked six or seven weeks ago, and the white house really did not have ready-made executive orders and things ready to go,
for, and they crafted a speech that was john mccain s speech to be used at the republican national convention in philadelphia about george w. bush, and it was a remarkable speech. very well received. well appreciated by president george w. bush when he became president. and it kind of showed a lot of people involved in the partisanship of an intraparty squabble, inside the republican party, that you could actually work with and respect the people who have different views but are carrying the same label. john mccain was a proud republican, but he made room for lots of other product republicans to have views a little different than his. doug, inside the republican party, looking back between 2008 to today after he left washington a few months ago, he was very active, sending statements about what he thought was wrong with the republican party, wrong with the administration as well. let s talk about republicanism here. what d he make of the turn in