[national anthem] rachel: good morning, everybody. it s 6:00 a.m. here in new york city on a beautiful memorial day weekend, and i m so happy to be joined by my friends will cain and joey jones. good morning. will: good morning. that was the navy s national anthem the national anthem performed by the navy s northeast ceremonial band, they were with us yesterday rachel: they were so good, we had to keep them. joey: it was the navy s national anthem, it s everybody s national anthem the. [laughter] rachel: air force and america. yeah. so it s great to be back, and it has been beautiful. i spent time laying out with my family by the pool. will: you did? [laughter] rachel: yesterday. just getting an early start to the memorial day celebration. joey: i guess most americans are probably their second, third day into their memorial day weekend, working for me means i get to share stories and talk about the people that matter so much to me, so honestly i don t think there
but are voters listening to a message the president has said is at the heart of the 2024 election? we ll take you to normandy, and i ll talk to mitch landrieu, co-chair of the biden re-election campaign. plus, new details about the drugs and the gun at the heart of the hunter biden trial coming from his late brother s widow. it s the stuff of sensational headlines and family turmoil, but what does it mean for the legal case itself? and donald trump adding new fuel to calls for retribution against his political enemies insisting he d have, quote, every right to do it. he also said the country doesn t want it, but would that stop him. but we begin against the backdrop against the beaches of normandy, that powerful evocative symbol of the fight for freedom. today it s where president biden on the 80th anniversary commemoration of d-day warned that in his words democracy is more at risk today than at any time since world war ii. the ceremonies were a moving mix of messaging
maybe just simply disagrees with the need for both. . yeah, absolutely. i m sitting here listening to this. it s almost discouraging that we have to question whether some of these things are still important to people. this used to be table stakes that democracy and freedom are things we re all in this game for, politics as a vocation, and that you re willing to do a lot of things to preserve that because you know it s important. you know, i think there s a strain of both parties that are isolationist. you ve seen the biggest shift in the republican party under donald trump. much more isolationist. i think it rests on, frankly, naivety about the world. we know donald trump doesn t care much about sacrifice or anything greater than himself, but what i fear is this has taken hold in a lot of places in the party. they just don t view this as our
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