MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on Donald Trump’s dangerous and awful secrets resurfacing as he tries to hide his past connections.
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Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear spooked CNN's Kate Bolduan by describing how nearly a Louisville plane crash could have been exponentially worse.
A UPS plane crashed Tuesday evening as it departed Louisville Muhammad Ali International Airport for Honolulu, killing at least three crew members and at least six other people and sending up an enormous fireball and thick clouds of black smoke, and the Democratic governor told "CNN This Morning" the death toll would likely rise.
"We do think it's goingto grow, sadly," Beshear said. "But the searchand rescue mission went throughthe night has been able tointensify today, so hopefully itwon't grow by much. We alsohave two individuals in criticalcare at U of L hospital. We'repraying for them and for theirrecovery. It's hard to losenine plus people in such aviolent way."
However, Beshear said the crash could have been far worse.
"This plane barely missed arestaurant bar," he said. "It was veryclose to a very large Ford plantwith hundreds, if not a thousand-plus workers. It was very closeto our convention center that's having a big livestockshow that people were arrivingfor. So really tough, butrecognize it could be worse."
Bolduan was stunned by the disclosure.
"That just gave me chillsthinking about all of the peoplethat were right in the line ofthis crash," she said. "I mean, when you seethe debris field and whathappened with this plane, it'sterrifying. I mean, how muchdestruction and damage are wetalking about here?"
"Well, it's a huge amount ofof damage in about a city block,about a mile," Beshear replied. "Think about theplane loaded with 38,000 gallonsof air fuel hitting apetroleum, not refinery, butrecycler, which also added tothe to the challenges, and thenan auto parts lot, and so what wesaw is not just the directimpact and explosion of theplane, but everything that thenoccurred on the ground.Thankfully, there wasn't anysignificant hazardous materialinside the plane. The airquality conditions are improvingsignificantly. We now have ashelter-in-place [order] only around avery small area. We'remonitoring water, because of the air, the jet fuel. Butthe area that we're concernedabout is smaller thanoriginally anticipated, and thenwe've just got so manyincredible first responders onon the scene from dozens ofdifferent agencies that do sucha great job."
"So we are veryquickly getting a hold of theenvironmental search and rescueand other challenges we face," the governor added, "and we'll probably have somepretty close to to finalinformation mid-afternoon."
Democratic governors are quietly sharing worries that President Donald Trump intends to disrupt next year's congressional elections, according to a political insider.
The president told U.S. troops this week that he was prepared to send "more than the National Guard" into American cities as he escalates a confrontation with Democratic-led local governments, and MSNBC's John Heilemann told "Morning Joe" that high-ranking officials are growing concerned about whether free and fair elections would take place in 2026.
"Trump has essentially taken theattitude and pursued policiesin line with the attitude of, 'I'm the president, I can dowhatever I want," Heilemann said. "You know, we've talked foryears about the expandingpurview of executive power in America, but Trump is so far atthe extreme of that.This is clearly one of the largest areas where that's the case."
"Youknow, when Trump decided tonationalize the National Guard, to federalizethe National Guard in California, in Los Angeles, thefirst of these moves, it was the first time that a president had overridden the wishes of a governor ofa state since back in the civil rights era, when troops were federalized totry to integrate some of theschools in Alabama and otherstates in the South. So there is a not in our lifetimes precedent for this, and Trump has not just done it once, but is now doing it pretty much everywhere."
Those aggressive moves against Democratic-led states and cities have provoked some dark fears among the president's political opponents, Heilemann said.
"That is raising the specter you're talkingabout, which is, in the medium term, is this part of a strategyto try to steal, effectively,or at least put your thumb very,very firmly on the scale of the 2026 midtermelections, but also with thenormalization project," Heilemann said. "We're not even a year in, andwe've had multiple cities wherewe've seen this happen.
"In thecourse of the next three years, is the longer term objective to getto a place where troops on American streets havebecome so normalized that not only have the 2026 midterms been affected, butthat the 2028 presidentialelection could be affected,with Trump basically saying, 'Thewhole country is in a state ofemergency and I'm going todeclare martial law and nothave the 2028 presidentialelection.'"
"That is the fear of alot of people in theprogressive camp, that this is where it's going," he added, "and I don't mean just wild-eyedprogressives, I mean a lot of Democratic governors arealready starting to whisperthat and say that to reporters,that that's where they thinkthis is really headed over thecourse of the next three years."
Host Jonathan Lemire said he's been hearing the same concerns in his own reporting.
"That sentiment is outthere, a terrifying one, and onethat will be worth obviouslykeeping an eye on in the months and years ahead," Lemire said.
The clash came after Greenblatt appeared on MSNBC hours to announce his anti-semitism watchdog had launched a Mamdani Monitor, to track the mayor’s policies.