consensus. they found a center point and that s whereby they governed from. and they passed laws that have well beyond their time in the white house. steve: yeah. good point. get stuff done that lasts forever. doug and sydney and lydia, thank you very much for joining us from all across america today. god bless america and everyone out to our friends at campbell. steve: absolutely. doug, thank you. it is 7:00 here in new york city. the second hour of fox & friends starts right now. lawrence: we begin the second hour of fox & friends with this happening. today, hunter biden s legal team is prepared to fire paperwork in delaware later this morning, asking to dismiss the first son s gun charges. ainsley: i wonder if that will happen? they have been asking for that for a long time. today is paperwork day. facing a dozen counts. carrying 17 years. tax related charges for last thursday. and maximum 25 years behind bars for the gun related charges back in september
no power? no problem. introducing storm-ready wifi. now you can stay reliably connected through power outages with unlimited cellular data and up to 4 hours of battery back-up to keep you online. only from xfinity. home of the xfinity 10g network. tonight on three 60 a new word about how we re gonna use in new on the prosecutors plan to use the former presidents embrace of january six defendants in court, we ll talk about that and more with liz cheney, whose new book has plenty to say about donald trump and the threat he poses a free look. it all style, exclusive new reporting s about how much longer israel might continue high intensity crown operations in gaza, which today saw some of the heaviest fighting for war. plus, what key voters in a key swing state have to say about their choices for 2024. john king finds out in the latest edition of our special series of reports, all over the map. good evening, thanks for joining us again. our guest tonight here within studio is li
thanks for joining us. anderson starts now. tonight on 360, new word on how prosecutors plan to use the former president s embrace of january 6th defendants against limb in court. we ll talk about that and more with liz cheney whose new book has plenty to say about donald trump and the threat she believes he poses. also new reporting on how much longer israel might continue high intensity ground operations in gaza which today saw some of the heaviest fighting in the war. plus, what key voters in a key swing state have to say about their choices for 2024. jon king has our series of reports all over the map. good evening. our guests tonight here with me in studio is liz cheney. former wyoming republican congresswoman, vice chair of the house january 6th committee. our conversation comes at the end of a day that saw two potentially significant january 6th related developments. the first involving the evidence in the subversion case want jurors to see. the second on what mike j
for up to 70% off designer brands, it house the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry be gone in a flash, designer sales at up to 70% or so of gilt.com today welcome to inside politics. i m kasie hunt in for dana bash, who co-moderating the cnn presidential debate last night. that s triggering a five alarm fire inside the democratic party. we re gonna get to that in just a moment. but first we do want to follow this breaking news it s the supreme court just ruled that the justice department overstepped by charging hundreds of people who rioted at the capitol on january 6 with obstruction. the ideologically mixed six to three ruling could force federal prosecutors to reconsider charges in dozens of pending cases. and may have an impact on the case against donald trump. i want to turn now to cnn s paula reid, andrew mccabe, evan perez to break this all down for us, paula, i want to start with you. can you explain what this means for the h
donald trump becomes the first american president convicted of a felony after a new york jury found him guilty of 34 counts of falsifying business records. i did my job. we did our job. the only voice that matters is the voice of the jury, and the jury has spoken. it s reckless. it s dangerous. it s irresponsible for anyone to say this was rigged just because they don t like the verdict. how will the historic verdict impact the 2024 race? the real verdict is going to be november 5th by the people. my guests this morning, former manhattan district attorney cyrus vance, tom cotton of arkansas, and hakeem jeffries. joining me for insight and analysis are amy walter, editor in chief of the politico report. leigh ann caldwell of the washington post. former white house press secretary jen psaki, and lahnee chen. welcome to sunday. it s meet the press . from nbc news in washington, the longest-running show in television history, this is meet the press with kristen w