Today's headlines: The 11th US Circuit Court of Appeals has temporarily saved Lindsey Graham from having to testify in the Georgia investigation into his actions on behalf of Trump, while Liz Cheney has told ABC News that the January 6th Committee has "been in discussions" with Mike Pence's legal team about him potentially testifying. Mitch McConnell stated at a Kentucky event that “there’s probably a greater likelihood the House flips than the Senate. Senate races are just different — they're statewide, candidate quality has a lot to do with the outcome.” The National Republican Senatorial Committee has canceled TV advertising worth about $10 million dollars. New highlights in House Discrimination cases, as a Johns Hopkins professor experienced an almost 300 thousand dollar appraisal discrepancy that was based on his race. The daughter of a very influential advisor to Putin, Daria Dugina, was killed when her car exploded outside Moscow this weekend. Finally, a school district in the Dallas-Fort Worth area has reportedly banned at least 40 books, including an Anne Frank adaptation.
Resources/Articles mentioned this episode:
NPR: Graham gets a temporary reprieve from an order to testify before a grand jury
ABC: Liz Cheney to ABC News on Pence testifying: 'I would hope that he will do that'
NBC: McConnell says Republicans may not win Senate control, citing 'candidate quality'
Washington Post: ‘It’s a rip-off’: GOP spending under fire as Senate hopefuls seek rescue
AP News: Car blast kills daughter of Russian known as ‘Putin’s brain’
Washington Post: Anne Frank adaptation, 40 more books pulled from Texas school district
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