policies. a former top new york prosecutor says has led to quote insanity. critics have been slamming bragg s decision to offer plea bargains in some cases, and his original decision in an infamous memo not to even prosecute some crimes. meantime, in los angeles, progressive d.a. is defending his record on crime in a new interview as he faces a recall effort. that comes just weeks after san francisco voters ousted its progressive district attorney in a recall there. christina coleman is following these fast-breaking developments on the criminal justice front. she s in los angeles. hey, eric. hundreds of prosecutors are throwing in the towel due to these controversial criminal justice reforms or they are supporting the ramped-up recall effort against the liberal d.a. this is happening in two democrat-run states, here in california and new york. new york post is reporting that this year 65 district attorneys which is about 12% of the staff in manhattan s d.a. s office have le
thing, we win the election. i remember hearing the word wimp. he called him a wimp. wimp is the word i remember. it was a different tone than i d heard him take with the vice president before. do you remember what your father called him? the p word. the hearing included testimony that even after trump was informed violence was breaking out on the capitol, he tweeted an insult saying that pence lacked courage which the committee says led to a surge in the crowd. then i remember getting a notification on my phone and i was sitting in a room with roma and ben and we all got a notification so we knew it was a tweet from the apresident and w looked down and it was a tweet about mike pence. it was clear that escalating quickly. the committee also walked through right wing trump attorney john eastman s relentless effort to advance his legal theory that vice president pensz oi pence could on his own block certification of the election. and that theory was rejected by
Carley you are watching Fox And Friends First on wednesday morning, im carley shimkus. Todd im todd piro. Gaza strip on the brink of fullblown humanitarian crisis. Electricity is expected to go out any hour. Ammo arriving overnight. Trey yingst along the border with the latest. Trey. Trey todd and carley, good morning. We are along the israel gaza border watching the Israel Art Til Tillery trying to hit the eastern part of the gaza strip for a massive Ground Invasion in the coming days. Thousands of troops are staging. The air force striking targets overnight in a variety of neighborhoods in northern and eastern part of the gaza strip. Out of Northern Israel with lebanon, Lebanese Group hezbollah appears to have fired at a group of israeli soldiers. We do not have information other than we have an incident on the border that is under censorship from the israeli military. A lot is happening and a lot of numbers are going to cha change. The latest death toll is 1200 people. I want to sho
The prosecution allege it is the manner in which she was paid. And how it was ultimately covered up. Daniels was paid by donald trump just before the 2016 election. The defence say to protect his family. But the prosecution alleged she was paid through his adviser Michael Cohen who was later reimbursed for Legal Services by the trump organisation. An attempt to falsify Business Records in that way, is typically classified as a misdemeanor, in new york. But the prosecution argue that because it was paid right before the 2016 election that then constituted a Campaign Finance crime. A felony. For which Michael Cohen pleaded guilty in 2018. That is what Stormy Daniels testimony is central to this case. What was she paid for, and why was it so urgent . The former president says there is nothing to see. Lets speak to nada tawfik, our north america correspondent, whos in new york. There have been questions in recent days about whether this is actually cutting through. I mentioned the evidence
this is gps, the global public square. welcome to all of you in the united states and around the world. i m fareed zakaria coming to you live from new york. today on the program, an exclusive interview with the united nations secretary-general, antonio guterres. guterres is the man in the hot seat right now. he s been on the receiving end of much anger from israel. meanwhile, many are looking to the u.n. to do something to help diffuse the situation. gaza is becoming a graveyard for children. what can he do? i will ask him. and the democrats overperformed in this week s elections, but president biden s poll numbers hover near record lows for next year s presidential race. i ll ask pollsters anderson to red the tea leaves, but first, here s my take. hamas terrorist attacks between israel and israel s military action against gaza have unle unleashed firestorms in the united states and europe. watching it, i do wonder, does anyone believe in free speech anymore? now to no