is the night the committee has been building up to. the final for now hearing. they re putting it in primetime with the clear expectation that even more people will be watching. we re getting new details about what they will hone in on tonight. 187 minutes. 187 minutes they say that points to a dereliction of duty from former president donald trump. get used to those words, dereliction of duty. the time from the end of his speech on the ellipse when he told people to go to the capitol to his video asking the rioters to go home. the committee will say trump failed to act, despite pleas from his aides, allies and family, refused to call off the mob who stormed the capitol and threatened lawmakers, including his own vice president. the committee is also going to present new testimony and new evidence, including outtakes of this moment where trump delivered a message to his supporters one day after the attack, but only after being urged by his advisers to do so and struggling t
urged the crowd to march to the capitol, to when he finally called off the mob. tonight, will also feature never before seen outtakes from this video message, that the former president recorded for his supporters the day after the attack. we will also hear live testimony for first time from two key trump white house aides. senior ones, former deputy national security adviser matthew pottinger, and former deputy press secretary sarah matthews, both of them resigned in the immediate aftermath of january 6th. we begin this morning with cnn justice correspondent jessica schneider. this is quite a moment for the january 6th committee, break down for us what we should expect to hear this evening. yeah you heard it, outtakes, but also this crucial testimony. matthew pottinger, sarah matthews, they will provide key firsthand testimony of what was unfolding inside the white house. and particularly with then president trump, during those 187 minutes, where trump refused to act as t
government. those of us who believe in republican principles, ideals have a responsibility to try to lead the party back to what it can. our nation is preserved by those who abide by their oath to our constitution. but in reality right now liz cheney is leading an attack p on the presidency itself. so how one white house counsel pat cipollone and for questioning via subpoenaunse afr he had already talked to the committee voluntarily. by the way, it s justad a sign f growing desperation by a woman who understands that her political career is essentially over . she s trying to stretch her 1515 minutes of fame regardless of how much damage she does to the white house. toto the principle of separatin of powers and of course, to the constitution. a now, think about it this way. w how on earth is any president supposed to have candid conversations with his white house counsel, frankly, about anything if he believes that white house counsel can be dragged before a partisanss con
polarizing us institution. great. frankly, it s not really surprising. last year, for example, trusttea the media hit an all time low and it just can t rebound. it seems low this last week wass clarified why with why it s a lie, especially whend. comes o the supreme court. you want to give an example? here we go . new york times call holsey writes this about that big political roe v. wade ruling. senate republicans did not havep to take the politically risky step of banning abortions. the courts took care of that for them. really,rt you would think someoe who s been reporting for more than 30 years couldrm. easy have got this right. but he didn t with the supreme courtut actually did, as you knw ,was kicked the decision back to the states. they did not ban abortion atrd all yesterday after the court rejected a case from health care workers challenging new york s vaccine mandate. who else went after but clarence thomas is found, as a fact checking now. do you mind fact check
unemployment staying at 3.6 pers percent. bill: there are at the moment 11.4 million jobs open and 6 million unemployed americans which means the math says two jobs for every person that s looking for work today. gas is soaring. another record high today. $4.76 a gallon now. that s nearly twice as high as when president biden took office. bill: here is the good news. wages rising slightly up 5.2%. not enough to keep up with inflation is the bad news. that disparity creating a nationwide pay cut. team fox coverage this morning. jacqui heinrich and we begin with kelly o grady live from los angeles. kelly. today marks the first weekend of june. you would normally have people excited for weekend getaways, beach trips. instead drivers are facing more dread at the pumps. today is the seventh straight day of record highs. the national average jumped 5 cents overnight. that s just two cents shy of double the price when president biden took office. that means an extra $33 ev