ABRAMS: Yes, about the fact that the president of the United States is demanding if it's true, if it's not a joke, right, I would think it's kind of embarrassing that he's saying, well, all right, you know, I'll do it, but you got to put my name on Penn Station. You got to put my it's like, come on, man. He's almost got to be saying, are you serious?
State investigators have been on the scene in North Minneapolis. I know you're angry. I'm angry. What Donald Trump wants is violence in the streets. But Minnesota will remain an island of decency, of justice, of community, and of peace. Don't give him what he wants.
Reacting on CNN's The Source to the White House's new January 6 website page which accused Capitol Police of deliberately escalating tensions among patriotic protesters, who were unfairly targeted host Kaitlan Collins asked, That's blaming the cops for what happened that day, is it not Scott? Yeah, I mean, that's how you could read it, replied Jennings, who previously worked as an assistant to President George W. Bush:
I apologize without reservation to [Scott Jennings], Olbermann wrote in a Tuesday post to X. Olbermann said his messages related to Jennings and late-night comedian Jimmy Kimmel could be misinterpreted as a threat. Yesterday I wrote and immediately deleted 2 responses to him about Kimmel because they could be misinterpreted as a threat to anything besides his career. I immediately replaced them with ones specifying what I actually meant, he wrote.
PHILLIP: At today's visit illustrates a stark divide between the Trump administration and D.C. residents. As city crime stats show that violence is declining, Trump has said that those numbers are fake. And new polling also now shows roughly eight in ten oppose Trump's takeover. But Vance, like his boss, is not believing that data either. (BEGIN VIDEO CLIP) VANCE: I'm highly skeptical that a majority of D.C. residents don't want their city to be to have better public safety and more reasonable safety standards within Washington, D.C. (END VIDEO CLIP)
Jennings shared an article from the New York Post, in which writer Karol Markowicz noted that the numbers are being used in a specific way at a variety of anti-Trump events.