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July 31, 2024 33 mins
Hamas leader assassinated in Iran, now what??

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
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Speaker 2 (00:21):
Two three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
This stagrific This is your morning show with Michael Bill Johnny.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Six minutes after the hour and welcome to the final
day of July. We'll be pressing on to August tomorrow.
Where is this year going? Breaking news this morning, Hamas
leader Ishmael Hania was assassinated in Tehran. What makes this
significant is this is the Hamas leader take out on

(01:00):
Iranian soil, sending a clear message to Iran from Israel
that we know this is a proxy war and we
will not be intimidated by your soil in taking out
those responsible for an invasion in our country. For those
that are nervous over escalation, that's reasonable and that might

(01:20):
be difficult to avoid. It depends on if Iran should retaliate.
But the revolutionary guard, which is the people. Forget this,
it's the Islamic Republic of Iran, and while they have
an Iranian military, the Ayatola himself has a revolutionary guard
over the Islamic state. They confirmed the death of the
Hamas leaders, So that's very breaking news. Waking up this morning,

(01:44):
officials from the Secret Service in the FBI faced off
and clashed, got pretty heated yesterday on Capitol Hill. The
Federal Reserve expected to leave interest rates right where they're
at a twenty three year high. I can't find anybody
in the know that thinks any of the conversation today

(02:08):
is going to turn to lowering interest rates, not at
this point. Now, what did we expect three or four
cuts by the end of the year. What might we
get none to one? At this point, Vice President Kamala
Harris is daring Donald Trump to debate in a more
stunning moment of gaslighting. She's actually taking on Donald Trump

(02:36):
head on over handling the border. That's the context of
this clip. What I think we need to listen for is,
remember there's a lot of people doing exposes on just
how leftist Kamala Harris is. This was the Clinton apparatus

(03:00):
choice in twenty twenty, and she was the first to
leave the primary race. Why well, there was her famous
attack on Joe Biden, which made them very strange bedfellows
after the shadow campaign. But Kamala has a problem. She's

(03:20):
just not very likable. And when she finds her footing
and she finds her voice, it's very nasty and condescending.
So as you will see, we're only a week indo
this Queen Kamala traveling Salvation show. She's starting to find

(03:44):
that footing and old voice. So two things to listen
to it Once, her tone and of course she's in Atlanta,
so you tell me if she's trying to sound a
little more street wise. And then there's the content that
is breathtaking that she's going to try to gaslight the

(04:09):
American people that she has not failed as borders are,
that she wasn't even the borders are. In fact, it's
Donald Trump who has failed the border. Listen.

Speaker 4 (04:19):
Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been talking a
big game about securing our border, but he does not
walk the walk or as my frand Quaver would say,
he does not walk it like he talks here.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
All right, So but you know, in a serious note,
and you know I'm leaving everything up for you to decide,
I will put this on the radar. There's two Kamala.
Harris's one is kind of the mild, wanting to be lovable,
Mama La Kama, giggle fast Kamala. There's an example. And

(05:03):
then there's Mama Kamala the prosecutor, and when she gets
into prosecutor mode, it becomes very nasty, very condescending, and
quite frankly from her political past, very unlikable. Now, from
a content standpoint, there's only so much. Again, you can

(05:23):
gaslight and narrative, and you can get news to report it,
and you can get talking head shows on very low
rated networks to try to sell it. But it's a
narrative gaslighting that dies of reality political reality. And the
polls show clearly what America thinks about the border. It

(05:46):
is a priority issue and one that they believe their
policies personally, I would say, probably rightly believe have failed
compared to Donald Trump's that succeeded. So it's an all
out frontal attack, not even a flanker attack. I thought
that was the most interesting thing from the campaign drum

(06:08):
and the Senate approved two bills that will hopefully try
to boost safety and privacy for children online, but nothing
will protect children online more than their parents in their home.
Progress is slowly coming. I'm one of the California largest wildfires,
and the United States continues to lead overall in the
medal count at the Paris Olympics. There's no question yesterday

(06:31):
and I watched it in real time, which, by the way,
is not, as you know, a little something for Primetime.
When they added out the long waits for scorers and
gymnastics or waiting on other countries that you're not very
interested in to compete in between. You get used to Primetime.
It's like watching NFL Red Zone with Scott Hansen to
the action. Yeah, so I was watching in real time.

(06:52):
Of course, there's a lot of waiting around. All of
the women gymnasts were just sensational. You take it for granted,
you know that they're going to win, but you got
to go and do it.

Speaker 5 (07:05):
I was.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
I was taken by the moment. Simone Biles was last
on floor and floor was the last rotation and so
what's the assumption. Well, this is the this is the
greatest gymnast who ever lived. Of course she's going to
come through. But she still got to do it, and
something could happen. And when you watch it in real
time and you see all the waiting around, it took
forever to get the Italian score before her. So she's

(07:28):
just standing out there on the matt waiting and waiting
and waiting. And then time after time, what do they do?
They come through? And they come through every time. So
where do we begin on the Olympics? Obviously Simone Biles
and Team USA winning gold again. The US had another
very successful day in the pool in Paris, earning four

(07:48):
medals in all in three swimming finals yesterday. Robert Fink
silver in the men's eight hundred meter freestyle. He was
right behind. He just he kind of trailed a little
too much early, couldn't quite close the ground, but did
secure the silver medal. Reagan Smith and Catherine Berkoff played
second and third in the women's one hundred meter backstroke,

(08:10):
and Team USA also bagged silver in the men's two
hundred meter freestyle relay. Five more metal events in the
pool scheduled for today. I don't know why it's taking
me this long to have seen rugby. This is going
to shock a lot of people out there. I had
one friend, Red, who played rugby and followed rugby all

(08:32):
growing up. I just didn't. I mean, I knew it existed,
and i'd see a clip now and then of like
a scrum, which is where the expression comes from, often
using football, but I never sat and watched. I mean,
I would tell you the shock for me is I
almost enjoyed as much or more than NFL football or
traditional American football. And then you add to that this

(08:54):
women's rugby team and how they did the impossible in
the most unthinkable of ways. So New Zealand dominates women's rugby.
Australia is right behind them. We're not even in the
picture compared to England and other places. And we show

(09:15):
up and we just keep winning and winning. We get
to the to the Metal rounds. We lose, of course
to New Zealand, but then we get in the consolation
game against Australian and you're some she would be, oh,
we're gonna get killed. No, and they're down by five,

(09:36):
there's five seconds left on the clock. I mean, everybody's
celebrating they lost, right, I mean Australia won, and this
girl goes the distance of the field with no time
remaining in a walk off touchdown to tie it, and
then they kick the extra point and win it, and

(09:57):
that's it. I mean, stole my I will forever remember
the twenty twenty four Olympics as the Olympics. I discovered rugby,
and now all I can think of is one as
men's rugby start is I want to watch that. I
am just captivated by what a great game.

Speaker 6 (10:12):
And I found out it's over after yesterday. I mean,
that was it for the women, right, yeah, for the
women's rugby. Yeah, they got the bronze medal. So uh,
I think that's our first time. Last time the US
won a medal in rugby was the men's team took
home golden nineteen twenty four. I don't know that the
women have ever medaled in the history of the Games

(10:36):
in rugby.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
Just it was And then I got my my wife
exposed to it, my kids exposed to it. It was like
a family affair. We watched. I watched the repeat three times.
You can get the relatively short games, I mean they're
really short kind of almost like two halves of like
I think six or eight minutes in running time and
goes by really sureseys for Christmas rugby jersey. I mean
they're playing tackle football with no equipment. That's serious stuff.

(10:59):
It's you know, it's like watching the old NHL when
the goalie used to be in the net with no
mask on. All right, make a long story short. The
United States continues to lead the overall medal count at
the Paris Olympic Games. Team USA added six more medals yesterday,
including the women's gymnastics team all around gold, give us
now his twenty six total medals, seven more than France,

(11:23):
which sits in second. China is third with fourteen medals.
With six medals on Tuesday, the United States became the
first country in the history to surpass three thousand medals
all time. See here at home, we fight amongst ourselves.
We're divided amongst ourselves. But this gives us a chance
to step aside comparatively and compete against the world and

(11:49):
your boys and girls, your men and women are competing
gallantly and lead the world in Paris and the twenty
four Olympic Games. And as for me, well, yearyears old.
I discover a new favorite sport, rugby. Let's see if
I like the men's rugby as much as I like
the women's rugby. All right, So there's a lot going on.
Nothing compares to the hearings that took place with the

(12:11):
FBI and Secret Service, because we haven't gotten to the
bottom of anything yet. And when I play you in
exchange coming up at six point thirty, you're going to
see they're not still very anxious to get to the
bottom of anything and take any actions. So you may
have replaced the leader of the Secret Service, but you
have moved no further in finding out how this happened,

(12:32):
how to keep it from ever happening again, and firing
anybody that was so incompetent to as to allow it
to happen. No progress made there, And a very heated
exchange between the FBI, Secret Service and I sidate hearing yesterday.
And then of course the taking out of Ismaeil Haniya,
who was the Hamas leader political leader for a long time,

(12:54):
considered the main leader. He was in Tehran, Iran. Israel
takes him out on Iranian soil of escalation. That's our
big story will be keeping an eye on and roy
O'Neil will be joining us throughout the morning with the
latest on that. This is your morning show with Michael
del Torona. Breaking news of the hour is the assassination

(13:16):
and the taking out of Ismael Hania who was the
Hamas leader. And it was done on Irani and Sol
Do you have Aaron by the way, Yeah, you need
to tell me those kinds of things. Don't keep secrets
from me.

Speaker 7 (13:28):
I just got her.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
What does this do to the whole cease fire talks,
escalation and the threat of escalation if Iran should respond
and FED not expected to increase interest rates today? And
Vice President Kamala Harris might change your name to Kamala Gaslight.
She's actually attacking Donald Trump over the border co figure
well the record heat. I actually, Aaron, you be very

(13:53):
disgusted with me yesterday. I spent the entire day indoors
to avoid it. I lived the life of the Truman Show.
But it's freaking havoc out of fruits and vegetables right,
Prices are going up.

Speaker 5 (14:05):
It sure is. It's wreaking havoc on outdoor air for
you and agriculture here throughout the US. So if there's
any good news. I want to start with this, because
prices are going out, But for the rest of the summer,
if you're going to buy those fresh blueberries, which we
all love in summer, monsti, watermelon, or whatever it is,
they're going to stay the same. And that's because these

(14:27):
contracts with distributors and the retailers at the grocery stores,
they tend to be worked out far in advance. However,
for the next couple of years, expect prices to go up,
and that's because consumers are going to have to shoulder
the burden of the cost that farmers are going to
incur from either a bringing their crops indoors, essentially building

(14:47):
massive climate controlled basically umbrellas on top of their farms.
If you ever see a flyover these, it's pretty incredible.
Or they're just going to have their crop cut in
half because not everyone can incur that bill. And when
the supply goes down, the demand goes up, the prices
go with it.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
Yeah, and if you get the little you know, when
you're at the grocery store and you get the ones
that are pre cut, you can always expect to pay
a premium for them. That may actually go up as well.
All right, So we just need more too hot of
temperatures and not enough rain. Right, that's the bottom line.

Speaker 5 (15:20):
That's the bottom line. And listen, this is this trend
is here to stay. It's not like this is just
a blip in terms of the weather we're experiencing. This
is a global phenomenon. Things are hotter. Let me give
you an example, corn, which is one of the top
produced crops in the entire US. It's grown in almost
every state. It's suffered very steep losses from heat. And

(15:42):
there was a twenty twenty one study from the Atlantic
Council that found that corn growers all together lost seven
hundred and twenty million dollars in revenue from lost crops
to heat. And they think that number is going to
be closer to two billion by twenty thirty. It's simple
supply and demand. There's less of the cross and if
you have less of the crop and you want corn

(16:02):
on your barbecue and you haven't grown it in your
own backyard, it's going to be a luxury item. I
fear that fruits and vegetables are going to truly become
luxury items.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
Well, not in my backyard where our crop of tomatoes
have never been more beautiful. If you would need a
nice cherry tomato and feel free to fly in corn.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
By the way, great. I love that you bring that
up because I think that more and more people this
will create a green thumb boom out of necessity. I
would imagine if you do domestic kind of individual gardens
that's your profession, I think that there could be boom
times ahead if I was just a long play. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
And by the way, peppers, the nastier the better. They
don't like nice conditions. Starve them up some water, hopefully
it's nice and hot, and they get nastier and nasty,
which makes them hotter and hotter. Corn, by the way, subsidized,
but used in so many ways, in such high demand.
In fact, you can almost make a case we eat
corn the least so much it's used now I know

(17:00):
other things like that. Yeah, no surprise that one was
hit the hardest. All right, Aaron's gonna be back. Talk
about the FED and will they lower interest rates? I
think we all agree they won't, But I'll let her
tell you that an hour from now. Hey, it's me Michael.
You can listen to your morning show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
Friday from three to six Pacific, five to eighth Central,

(17:20):
and six to nine Eastern on great radio stations like
Talk six fifty KSTE and Sacramento one oh four nine,
The Patriot in Saint Louis and Impact Radio one oh
five nine and twelve fifty w h d Z in Tampa, Florida.
Sure hope you can join us live and make us
a part of your morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy
the podcast. Thanks for waking up with your morning show
on Michael del Jorna. Welcome to Wednesday, July the thirty first,

(17:44):
twenty twenty four. Believe it or not, July is over
after today. The far and away big story Hamas leader
Ismayel Hania was assassinated in Tehran, Iran. This according to
the Revolutionary Guard making the announcement, but he immediately has
claimed responsibility for the attack. Israel, of course, immediately blamed

(18:06):
for the assassination. After all, they pledged to kill Aniya
and other Hamas leaders over the terrorist group's attack on
October seventh of last year on the Jewish state took
twelve hundred people's lives. He was in Tehan for the
presidents swearing in, and on Tuesday morning, Iranian Supreme Leader

(18:27):
Ali Hameni posted on social media platform X even the
ayatolas on X the assassination. Who doesn't Mexican, I guess
had taken place? Two things, What does this do to
any ceasefire negotiations? Number one? Two, This is the closest

(18:51):
the region has been to all out conflict in the
last ten months. That's according to Mick Melroy, who served
as a top Pentagon official for the Middle East during
the Trump administration. He said, hes Bellah and now Iran
with this assassination on Iranian soil, and don't forget Amas
is just a proxy for Iran Hezbeala. Now Iran will

(19:14):
likely have to retaliate. All diplomatic efforts should be made
to find an offer him to de escalate the situation.
If nothing changes, the current trajectory of war seems inevitable.
This is all very troubling. I will tell you, I'm
troubled why I've always said it this way. The epicenter
of the world is the Middle East been that way

(19:36):
to the begin You know you you are free to
believe or not believe in America, but that little, meaningless,
tiny piece of land has always been at the epicenter
of the world. Those of us with faith know why.

(19:56):
And the epicenter of the epicenter is Jerusalem. The epicenter
of the epicenter of the epicenter is a temple mount.
So from a historic view, a geopolitical view, you know
there's a pathway to war. And then from a prophetic
since there's the inevitability. So it's like a clock we

(20:19):
glance at anytime anything's happening in the epicenter of the world,
the Middle East and concerning Israel, i'm all ears. Iran
has been a clear and present danger and probably the
most likely trigger of a clear and present danger we've
been living with for a long time, inching closer and
closer with the help of Russia and China and the

(20:42):
apathy of America and other countries to stop them, closer
and closer to having a weapon of mass destruction, and
they will use it. War is about means, motive and
opportunity they have. Remember they're the Iranian Republic, Islamic Republic
of Iran, and the Ayahtola that is at theocracy is

(21:06):
over it, and they have two goals to convert you
to Islam or at tax or kill you. Their secondary
goal is the destruction of Israel and then the destruction
of America. They have the ultimate goal of controlling the
entire world under a caliphat, and then that will trigger

(21:28):
the hit knee mom and their beliefs and the judgment
of Allah. So if they have the means, their motive
is on the offensive and it will take actions. So
whenever you have an incident like this, your concern would
be they stop fighting with proxies and attack directly. What

(21:51):
does it do to the ceasefire talks? What does it
do to the escalation? We'll talk more about that with
Roory O'Neil. Officials from the Secret Service, in the FBI,
the Senate yesterday, things got heated. If I had to
pick a favorite exchange, I'm gonna go to Josh Holly
because he most represented me yesterday. The Republican from Missouri. Look,

(22:13):
I know you got rid of your director of your
Secret Service. Okay, great, she certainly deserved to be removed.
But there were regional office leadership and ground leadership that
made strategic decisions that are ultimately to blame, has anything
happened to them? These are the same people that are
out there making calls today. I mean, remember, in this

(22:35):
whole crazy story, the scariest of it all was AOC
got it. Do you realize if Donald Trump doesn't turn
to look at that graphic and has assassinated the level
of civil unrest, the potential for civil war that might
have existed. And we're just getting started. The full general

(22:58):
election hasn't even begun yet. This simply cannot happen for
purposes of peace and stability, Not to mention it as
a former president becomes an issue of national security. He's
under threat from Iran. See the escalation conversation we just had.

(23:20):
And by the way, we haven't even dusted that out.
And there's more we know about this shooter planning up
to a year. The communication was given by local and
law enforcement ninety minutes before the actual shooting, and the
shooting was allowed, never mind decisions to not protect a
rooftop and who made them and have they been fired?

(23:41):
We haven't solved anything. And just as it was unacceptable
to wait sixty days for an investigation in order to
fire people that deserve to be fired, and understand what
happened so that it never happens again. That was unacceptable
when the director of the Secret Service was there, and
it's still in effect. So that interim director and an

(24:01):
FBI and what are they saying. It's very similar to
everything the Biden Harris administration has done, and now you're
just going to change the face and it supposedly none
of it applies. All you did was get rid of

(24:23):
the director and put an interim director in. All the
questions are the same, and the lack of answer is
unfortunately the same as well. Nobody captured that like Josh.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
Holly Lis American is dead, that other Americans were critically wounded.
Isn't that enough mission failure for you to say that
the person who decided that that building should not be
in a security premer probably ought to be stepped down?

Speaker 8 (24:46):
Senator, I think you're using a word decided, and I
think we need to allow the investigation play out.

Speaker 2 (24:53):
To include Okay, so who did make the decision then
if it wasn't the leads site agent who made the
decision not to put that in security premier.

Speaker 8 (25:00):
You're zeroing in on one particular agent. I want to
find out exactly yeah, what was the entire decision process?
So I think, yeah, I want to be neutral and
make sure that we get to the bottom of it
and interview everybody in order to determine if there was
more than one person perhaps exercise bad judgment.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Well sure, My question is why don't you relieve everybody
of duty who made bad judgment? So, yeah, you're right,
I am zeroing in on somebody. I'm trying to find
somebody who's accountable here. And so you're telling me that
the person who made the decision not to include this
in the perimeter has not been relieved of duty. What
about the person who's in charge of the interoperability of
radio frequencies between local law enforcement and Secret Service? Has

(25:37):
that person been relieved to duty?

Speaker 8 (25:40):
No, center, because interoperability is a challenge, is a greater
challenge than just one person. On that day, we had
a counterpart system.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
It failed.

Speaker 2 (25:52):
As a person who decided who made the decision to
send Donald Trump onto stage knowing that you had a
security situation, has that person been relieved of duty?

Speaker 1 (26:00):
They haven't.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
As the person who decided not to pull the former
president off of stage when you knew that, in your words,
the locals were working a serious security situation. Has that
person been relieved of duty?

Speaker 8 (26:10):
No, sir, Again, I refer you back to my original
answer that we are investigating this through a mission assurance
and as opposed to zeroing in on one.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
What more do you need to investigate to know exactly
what you need to investigate to know that there were
critical enough failures that some individuals ought to be held accountable.
I mean, what more do you need to know?

Speaker 8 (26:29):
What I need to know is exactly what happened. And
I need my investigators to do their job, and I can't.
People didn't either. Can not put my thumb on the scale. Otherwise,
what do you mean put your thumb the objective? The
object You're asking me, Senator, to completely make a rush
to judgment about somebody failing. I acknowledge this was a.

Speaker 2 (26:48):
Failure of Is it not primo facia that somebody has
failed a former president?

Speaker 1 (26:52):
Was sure not, sir.

Speaker 8 (26:53):
This could have been our Texas school book depository. I
have lost sleep over that for the last seventeen days.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
Just fuire somebody so I will tell you, Senator.

Speaker 8 (27:02):
I will tell you, Senator that I will not rush
to judgment that people will be held accountable, and I
will do so with integrity and not rush to judgment
and put people.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
I unfairly persecute it.

Speaker 8 (27:18):
We have to be able to have a proper investigation
into this.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
Senator, you said earlier that you've got to make sure
that your protocols are followed, and unless there's a protocol violation,
people wouldn't be disciplined. I would just say to you,
I don't really care that much about your protocols. I
think if your protocols don't provide for the fact that
when a former president is shot, when an American is killed,
when other rally goers, innocent people who just showed up
on the day, when they are shot at and critically wounded,

(27:45):
if that isn't a protocol violation prima facia, you should
revise your protocols.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
I mean, that's a lot. First thing in the morning,
I'll grant you. Listen. The only thing worse the not
taking an action to solve something is to pretend or
to convince people you have when you haven't. Does anybody

(28:15):
think that Ronald Rowe, the interim director of the Secret Service,
is sounding any different than the director of Secret Service
who was relieved I'm being kind in doing this in
the form of a question or to AOC's concerns, we
can't wait sixty days he and the FBI are still

(28:36):
telling you we're investigating. We're investigating. I already know enough,
just overhearing every day the news. What about the shooters
offshore accounts? What are you doing? You know you claim
you're losing sleep. You almost had your Texas book depositor.

(28:57):
What have you been doing all these days? Are there
links between the shoot Now we find out his social
media had links to radical organizations. That's taken two weeks
to figure out, three weeks to figure out. This guy

(29:18):
should have been on the radar, let alone not walking
around with a range finder, let alone having an empty,
low sloped roof to go get his shots off. I
saw a meme today. I'm not for these kind of
escalating memes, but you know my fascination with memes. In
a sea of words, in a sea of lies, memes

(29:39):
they're just quietly there, like truths, nobody hanging from. I've
always said every year we had to do a book
of memes. That's the best way to understand the year
that was just lived and the means, says plan A
that shows the shooter plan B. It shows Kamala, it's
looking like that interim director doing the same games of

(30:03):
the former director who was removed. Her removal has changed nothing.
No one has been fired. There's no further understanding. Therefore,
you should have no assurance that anybody is any safer Today.
Senator Josh Holly, Republican of Missouri our sound of the day,

(30:30):
if not a year so far.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
Hey, this is Lee Murphy in Cottontown, Tennessee.

Speaker 9 (30:38):
My morning show is your Morning show with Michael Bill Jorno.

Speaker 1 (30:43):
Thanks for waking up with your morning show. I'm Michael
del Journal kicking off another long set of five top
stories up the town. Mama Kamela, Oh, Mama, La Caath.
I hit the campaign trail to tell everyone Trump is
the problem with the border. Mark Mayfield has there. Today.

Speaker 9 (31:05):
In politics, Vice President Harris is continuing to apply pressure
towards former President Trump for a debate.

Speaker 4 (31:12):
Donald Trump, on the other hand, has been talking a
big game about securing our border, but he does.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
Not walk the walk.

Speaker 9 (31:23):
And a rally in Atlanta Tuesday, Harris said that momentum
in the race is shifting that Trump won't debate despite
him and running mate j d Vance having a lot
to say about Harris. Harris also went on to call
out Trump on immigration, saying she will put her record
against his any day. And lawmakers clash with the acting
director of the Secret Service over security failures that led
to the attempted assassination of former President Trump. Tensions boiled

(31:44):
over during a congressional hearing yesterday as Missouri Senator Josh
Holly pressed Acting Director Ronald Rowe to fire officials involved
in securing the Pennsylvania rally where Trump was shot. Holly
said it was clear fireable offenses occurred given that Trump
was shot and a rally goorer was killed. Rowe argued
that the investorstigation into the incident is ongoing and he
will not rush to judgment.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
That's politics. Mark Mayfield, NBC News Radio. Senate Minority leader
Mitch McConnell says President Biden's proposed term limits for Supreme
Court justices will be dead on arrival in Congress. Brian
Shook has more.

Speaker 10 (32:15):
The Republican leader, told reporters Tuesday that Biden's proposed reforms
are unconstitutional. Biden on Monday called for major reforms to
the Supreme Court, including term limits and an enforceable code
of ethics. He also proposed a constitutional amendment to limit
the broad immunity granted to presidents by a recent Supreme

(32:36):
Court decision. I'm Brian Shook.

Speaker 1 (32:39):
TikTok and any Byteedance owned platforms will be removed from
all house managed phones on July. On August fifteenth, Tammy
Trihilo has those details.

Speaker 7 (32:49):
The Chief Administrative Officer announced the crackdown on the China
based companies apps on Tuesday that includes the apps cap Cut, High, Pich,
Lark and Lemonade. Office asked all lawmakers and stafford to
remove the apps from their phones in twenty twenty two,
but the newest Director of warrants that if anyone still
has any of the apps on a house managed mobile device,
they'll be contacted to remove them. I'm Tammy TRHUEO.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
Late night host Jimmy Kimmel is out as the host
of this year's Oscars. Phil Hewitt reports.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
Kimmel reportedly turned down the offer to host the ceremony
for a fifth time, and according to several entertainment outlets,
comedian John mulaney has also turned down the job. It
is unclear who will host the ninety seventh Academy Awards
presentations that are scheduled to be held on March second
of next year at the Dolby Theater in Hollywood. I'm

(33:37):
Phil Dubette.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Chorna
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