imprint.com for certain well, welcome to all you watching us here in the states, canada, and all around the world. >> i'm kimberly, who bird this? his cnn newsroom, wall calls today for president joe biden to step away from the 2024 race how he's reassuring top donors that he's up for the task. first major hurricane of the 2024 season is churning in the atlantic where hurricane beryl is expected to go next. and thousands protests in israel is a former more hostage speaks out about her ordeal details plus how the united states is getting involved in the latest ceasefire efforts live from atlanta. this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber after spending time at camp david to prepare for the debate, joe biden is now at the presidential retreat to spend time with his family following his poor performance. but there's no getting away from the calls for him to end his canon campaign. and those calls just got a bit louder. sources tell cnn that the family gathering isn't aimed at making a decision on that. the white house says this was a long-planned family event expected to include a photo shoot still we're told the topic of just how badly the debate went is expected to come up. and these are the people who more than anyone holds significant influence over such decisions. biden and vice president kamala harris spent part of saturday trying to reassure donors that he is still the best candidate for the democratic party fundraiser saturday, biden told those gathered that he'll fight harder despite new calls for him to exit the presidential race. the largest newspaper here in the battleground, state of georgia is the latest a call for biden to drop out of a look, the atlanta journal constitution editorial board wrote, if he displays the courage and dignity than have defined his political career, you might follow in the footsteps of the nation's first president. and welcome his retirement secure in the knowledge, he again served this country with honore cnn's arlette saenz has more on the presence latest efforts to put the debate behind him president biden sought to reassure inke says donors after his debate performance, telling a group at a new jersey fundraiser, the he's ready to fight harder in this campaign, the president spent saturday with the first lady attended been three fundraisers in the hamptons in new jersey at each of those events, he acknowledged his poor debate performance, but try to assure donors that his candidacy remains on track. >> it comes as biden's advisers have fielded phone calls from anxious democrats and donors concerned about the state of the race and what it could mean to keep biden at the top of the demo chronic ticket after that debate, performance sources tell cnn that democrats are conducting polling and research over the weekend and early into next week to try to gauge the exact impact that debate will have on this reelection bid. they said they're not just looking at biden's reelection bid, but also how house and senate democrats who are in competitive races says could be affected as well. now the biden campaign so far has doubled down on the fact that president biden is remaining in the 2024 race. they say that he intends to debate donald trump in september and a memo from the biden campaign's chair jen o'malley, dillon said that they believed that this will be a very close race, but do believe that their team we'll put in the work to help joe biden beat donald trump in november. now president biden is going to spend saturday at camp david with the first lady and other members of their family all at a time when many questions are swirling about what could come next for biden in this campaign are let signs, cnn traveling with the president in new york joining us now from lancaster, england is richard johnson. he's a lecturer in u.s. baltics at queen mary university of london. thanks so much for being here with us. so we just heard some measured views there, but it's impossible to ignore the growing sense of panic among democrats strategists are racing around conducting new polls. the presence, meeting with his family this weekend. do we do you expect them to make any big announcement that perhaps he will step aside i mean the. timetable i've been hearing is he's got a week to prove himself and the important date to keep in mind is the convention. beginning on the 19th of august. and you have at the moment you're biden is not the democratic nominee. that will be a choice made by the convention the convention consists of about 4,000 delegates. now, joe biden has 99% of those delegates are pledged to joe biden. the rules of the democratic party say that those delegates should vote in good conscience for the candidate that they have pledged to vote for. but they don't actually have to vote for biden. that was a rule that was changed in the 1980s after ted kennedy's challenge of jimmy carter. it's called the robot rural by critics who said you just have to robotically vote for who you are pledged to vote for. so there is some room for biden's own delegates to vote against him, but i think it's unlikely that they would vote against him and so the question really then is a much more closer question, much more proximate question, which is, would joe biden? himself. pull back. and in effect, open up the process for a replacement exactly right. and if he were to i mean looking at some of the editorials written one on one of the many blows was that new york times editorial and in it they wrote, there are democratic leaders better equipped? crypts are present clear, compelling, and energetic alternatives to a second trump presidency. but is that true? i mean, one of the problems is the lack of a clear successor. normally it would be the vice president, but as has been pointed out many times, her numbers are actually worse than the precedents that i think is exactly the problem that has been the problem all along. i think dubai, there was a chance that joe biden might have been voluntarily a one-term president. he ran for president 2020, saying that he'd be abridged the future when he selected kamala harris four years ago as his vice presidential nominee, many people thought that in effect he was going to prepare her to be his successor. but from the start of his presidency doubts emerged about her ability to connect with the electorate. perceptions of her competence and so on some fast, some not so fat. and i think joe biden and effect decided at some point during his presidency that kamala harris would not be a strong candidate against donald trump and that the termination really i think meant that he had to run through election because biden couldn't say, i'm not going to run for reelection, but i also don't have confidence in my vice president to succeed me as the nominee and that is i think still his problem right now is i think probably the biggest barrier to him pulling back is his lack of confidence and kamala harris. but then if there's a groundswell for somebody else, let's say if they were to i guess leap frog her metaphorically, there would there be a danger of alienating certain groups of voters and the party essentially tearing itself apart exactly. so then, so then the problem becomes okay, well, in theory, biden could say actually i want us to have a fully open convention. i released my delegates. i want them to listen to the speeches. perhaps we'll have some cnn debates in the next few weeks between potential candidates might delegates can listen to those debates. the problem with that is that kamala harris we'll have a strong following within the party, maybe not enough to win the nomination. and her supporters will fail, will fuel to a certain extent, rightly aggrieved that the person who selected her to be the next in line for the presidency right now, doesn't feel comfortable saying that i think she should be the next president in january of next year. and then the risks for the democrats becomes depressed. turnout in november. and this is an all hands on deck election. the democrats need everyone all of their supporters to turn out they don't have the luxury of key constituencies staying home. or having lethargic turnout in november. and that i think is the risk of a messy nomination contest levs, i listed all of the left-leaning media that are calling for present bind to stand down after that debate. but we haven't seen the same mobilization by the right wing you know, basically calling for donald trump to stand down after, after he was convicted. i mean the double standards seems particularly acute here. the certainly is a double standard and you can look at, we can maybe go back to say 2016, actually, when the access hollywood tape came out and trump spoken pauling ways about treating women there were calls at that time for trump to stand down. i think if you look back at the media commentary around that time, people effectively thought trump would be, would be toast in the election. trump's inner circle told him to just plow on, to ignore it the fundamentals of the election were what mattered more and in that sense, they were vindicated i think the republicans took a certain lesson from that. and i wonder if the biden in a circle, will take a similar lesson. obviously it's a very different set of circumstances, but the biden campaign might, might basically say, look what really matters is the fundamentals of the election the economy back that you have been the president. people know you can be president because you are the president at the moment and i think there is a chance that biden does pull through. i'm not saying it's the right decision for november, but i think that there will be strong voices who might even look at the trump example and say, you can weather this storm and still win healey, a fascinating, a window of decision as you spoke up there, as we see what happens, richard johnson. thank you so much for urinalysis really appreciate it. >> thank you now, despite my last question there, joe biden, isn't the only one being asked to drop out of the presidential race. >> the philadelphia inquirers editorial board says donald trump is the candidate who should end his campaign. the board says the debate was a reminder of what another four years of trump would look like, quote, more lies and hate the board does acknowledge that president biden had a bad night, but says biden and his worst is still, quote, light-years better than trump as best voters across france are heading to the polls for high-stakes snap parliamentary elections. there will be two rounds of voting. first, today, and the second round will be held on july 7th. present in my no qualms party is facing challenges from both the country's far-right and a left-wing coalition. my colon called the vote after his centrist aligned lance was defeated by the far-right in european parliament elections earlier this month several caribbean nations, including barbados and grenada, are bracing for impact as beryl, the first hurricane of this year's atlantic season is expected to move across the windward islands late sunday night is now located north of french guy vanna and is getting stronger. the u.s national hurricane center forecasts beryl could bring life threatening winds and storm surge as a major hurricane record, warm ocean temperatures are to blame for the unseasonably early tropical system. and experts warn beryl is just the first of what could be more than a dozen hurricanes to come during this hype practice, atlantic season, warmer waters aren't the only breeding ground for more tropical systems and hurricanes. they can also lead to deadlier storms through a process called rapid intensification. cnn meteorologist chad myers explains why the phenomenon is so dangerous we know is going to be rough, but i wouldn't expect it all house flooded. >> it just started going deeper and deeper. and my time we were walking out, we were mid thigh those who have lived through hurricane that has undergone rapid intensification are often shocked by its speed and strength. rapid intensification is when a storm's maximum sustained wind speed increases by 35 miles per hour in 24 hours or less. and it could be a significant part of the 2024 hurricane season with both record warm ocean temperatures and developing, lead mean, yeah, it means essentially that one day you can look at a storm. it could be a tropical storm, maybe a category one hurricane when you wake up next morning and it's up to category four or five for the strongest hurricanes that have ever hit the united states, the high-end category four is a category five, were all tropical storms or less three days before landfall? one example of dramatic rapid intensification, hurricane ian in 2022, which took more than 100 lives across florida and the southeast i've been here since 1965 and this is the worst hurricane that i've ever been through. >> i was working at midnight shift when i got on shift, it was a category one to hurricane by the end of the shift, we had the aircraft in there and it had exploded up to category four. there's gonna be some huge waves with this. i was working in the morning shift that de and clearly saw the storm intensify overnight. i also warned of a slightly shifting track to the right of the center of that cone the time to evacuate was quickly closing. and i knew this was going to be bad when we tell people don't just check the forecast on one day and wait a whole another 24 hours to check it again, you really really do have to stay up to date when you live in a hurricane prone area 2024 has the potential to be a devastating hurricane season. >> no one has issued and above-normal atlantic hurricane forecast with up to 25 named storms, eight to 13 potential hurricanes and four to seven of those becoming major hurricanes. the u.s. tries to revive the ceasefire proposal for gaza after it hit a stumbling block. still ahead, a new diplomatic 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about one 120 hostages who are still in captivity. now on the diplomatic front, washington has proposed a new language in the stalled ceasefire plan for gaza, according to a senior us official, while on the front lines, tensions on israel's border with lebanon are escalating war with words with iran. elie gucken joins me now with more from london's so first elliott on the ceasefire talks, any reason for optimism around these new efforts? >> i wish they work in, but look, we've had a month now since president biden made that announcement of this new ceasefire proposal, which he said israel had signed off on. you've had the americans pressuring the egyptian and qatari mediators it has to put pressure on hamas to accept the deal. and yet despite all of that in the passage of that past month, there hasn't been any breakthrough. now, as we understand from a senior us administration official, they are trying to tweak some of the wording to bridge the gaps between israel and hamas but we heard from just on saturday, a hamas spokesman in beirut saying that the proposal that was outlined by president biden's still falls short of its key demands, which are a full cessation of hostilities and full withdrawal of israeli forces as the price for even starting this ceasefire, israel for its part, even though it says it accepts the wording of the proposal that was outlined by president biden says that it's still wants to have the right to complete a couple of its key war objectives, which are to destroy hamas military and governance capabilities. and so you do effectively have two diametrically opposed kind of red lines from the israelis and hamas. and it's very hard to see how that that gap is going to be bridged. and we've had periods of optimism over the past few months that a deal was imminent, that a deal was going to be done. but the fact is that almost nine months on there are still 120 hostages being held in gaza around a third of those are believed to be dead. and the prospects for this ceasefire plan don't seem necessarily any brighter even after the u.s is says that it's tweaking tweaking the wording to try to bridge those gaps can unfortunately. all right. and then elliot, there was a terror attack at the israeli embassy in serbia. so walk us through these quite extraordinary events so yeah, this happened at about 11:00 in the morning. >> local time. and according to cnn affiliate n1, what happened was a 25-year-old man whom serbian authorities says was a convert to islam common came from a town just south of belgrade. he approached the israeli embassy in the serbian capital, took a crossbow out of a bag, and then fired a bolt at the security officer who was guarding the embassy. now, despite having that bolt in his neck, the security officer managed to reach for his garden to fired several shots. at the attacker, killing him. the security around israeli embassies around the world is always pretty tight, but it's been ramped up since the hamas-led terrorist attacks of october the seventh. same goes for jewish institutions as well, and that security clearly was necessary there in belgrade, israel's foreign minister posting on x his gratitude to the serbian authorities in the serbian government for its response and for protecting the israeli embassy and wishing the security officer who's being treated in hospital a speedy recovery. all right. i appreciate that elleithee gucken, thanks so much. ukraine says a russian missile attack on a telomeres up region on saturday killed at least seven people, including three children. more than 30 other people were wounded. officials say the town was targeted in the middle of the day when people were out enjoying the weekend and after the attack, ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy repeated calls who allies for more weapons and air defenses. he says any delay means the loss of more human lives at least 18 people are dead and dozens more injured in northeast nigeria after bombings at a wedding, a hospital in a funeral, according to borno state's emergency services expecting mothers and children are among the dead. borno state has been gripped by more than a decade of violences extremist groups like boko haram have killed thousands of people and displaced millions more clashes between german protesters and police broke out saturday in the western city of essen when a conference for the far-right alternative for germany, afd is currently underway. the group organizing the protests says its mission was to prevent the spread of fascism. afd scored its best eu election result ever earlier this month the parties co-chairs as it's seen, a 60% increase in membership since january 2023 bolivia has arrested for more military officials in connection with the failed coup attempt. government officials say the latest arrests include a former commander of bolivia's air force her report sent to cnn via bolivian officials claims the country's former army chief was behind the coup. they say he started planning it in may and has since been detained and charged one sergeants accused of ramming a military vehicle into the government palace. and you can see you in this video from wednesday so far bolivia has arrested 21 people tied to the plot all right. after the break has calls for joe biden to walk away from the presidential race, grew louder. he's now at camp david with us most important advice phasors, his family what advice might they give him one more on that next and iran's presidential election ended with no winner. so voters have to head back to the polls well, you who their options are after the break, please stay with us. >> i'm thinking i'm going to die and i thought that was it finally earth with liev schreiber tonight, aid nine on cnn there are giant so much they are the men and woman building or babies next generation submarines. >> they are giant and what they do because they worked in a place where they can grow, where they can learn the 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comcast business 5-year price lock guarantee. powering 5 years of savings. powering possibilities. more it. stoke.com i'm pete mundane at reagan national airport this is cnn mecole, you watching us here in the states, canada, and around the world. >> i'm kim bruen hooper. this is cnn newsroom well, this could be a dave decision for u.s. president joe biden days after his disastrous debate, biden is now at camp david with family. now those family members couldn't help the present decide his next steps, whether he stays in the 2024 race or drops out violence, trying to put his debate performance behind him, having spent part of saturday telling donors he will fight harder. but there are calls for him to exit the presidential race. the atlanta journal constitution is the latest editorial board urging biden to quit the race meanwhile, a number of voters and a rally in washington, dc on saturday said they're disappointed in biden's debate performance, but some of them say that's off their top concern in this year's election. they turned out for this event put together by the poor people's campaign he looked fatigued and he looked at if he wasn't capable of the job in terms of the debate, detonate my hope is that he'll recover it. it will have a very vigorous debating season and campaign seasons where where you'll be able to articulate more clearly and with the level of vigor, i think at this point, while have our kenneth are of a similar age and i'm less worried about that and more worried about what they say they're going to do. >> you should not be 70 or 80-years-old in office. now, you're out of touch things evolve people evolve, times change. you need to change too, but they don't want to, because they're stuck in their old ways. >> the reason why it doesn't concern me is because of his the integrity where his heart is, and where his integrity lies is with the american people and it's not with donald trump. he's for himself. his for the billionaire class and all he wants is more wealth iranians will head to the polls again in the coming days after friday's presidential election failed to produce a winner. >> moderate lawmaker, masoud pezeshkian and ultraconservativ e former nuclear negotiator, saeed jalili will face each other in a run-off. fred pleitgen tells us what's next ron's presidential election is headed for a run-off after no candidate managed to get more than 50% of the vote. however, it was a pretty good showing by the moderate camp and there may intended at masoud so she can beforehand, the moderate can't had actually said that they believed they needed very high voter turnout in order for him to even have a chance to make it to the runoff stage while the voter turnout was actually very low, it was only about 40%. and yet pessach good john managed to get by far the most votes he got around 10.4 million votes, almost 1 million more than the second place candidate said jelly lead. now pezeshkian is somewhat who wants better relations, he says with countries here in the region, but also better relations with the west as well. and the supreme leader of this country, ayatollah ali khamenei, he had warn voters not to trust candidates that want better relations with the u.s. too much, you never main panel says john, however, there were some who believed that he meant pezeshkian with that. so jalili, for his part, came in second in the first round of voting. he someone who who says that he wants policies in line with what ebrahim raisi, the president who of course crashed a little over a month and ago and was killed, would have done that means tough flying towards the united states and also a tough line towards israel as well. the next round of voting set to take place this coming friday for cnn tech wrong i want to bring in greg calls from who's a middle east correspondent for the economist, and he's the author of the book, how long will israel survive the threat from within any joins me now via skype from cairo. >> thanks so much for being here with us. so the reformist candidate masoud pezeshkian can he win? i mean, even though he had a slight lead, there were actually more votes in total, for conservative candidates he did have a better showing. >> i think than many people predicted going into that first round on friday. but i think the question now in the runoff is if he can mobilize more reform voters. this is an electorate. the reform must block that has been increasingly disenchanted with iranian politics. they stayed at home, obviously during the last presidential election in 2021 when they had no candidate on the ballot, they stayed home during the most recent legislative election and pezeshkian was able to mobilize some of them on friday, but i think it's an open question whether he can convince more of them. i think what he's going to say two people going into friday is sort of you have a choice between me and this arch-conservative ultra conservative figure in xiii jalili and he's going to use fear, i think as a way to try and mobilize people to come out to the polls. you spoken the low turnout out there, the lowest, basically since, since the founding. now, what message do you think we're iranian sending but everyone is disenchanted. >> it wasn't just the reformists and i think one thing that was interesting if you look at the numbers, guess, as you said, the conservative candidates they got about 13 million votes between them. they got, they got more votes than possessions keon dead. but compare that to 2021, compare that to the election that ebrahim raisi, one, he got about 18 million votes. three years ago, it was about 13.5 million now for the conservative candidates. so four-and-a-half million to 5 million conservatives who voted in 2021, stayed home during this election. i think house you, it's not just the reform us two are a bit fed up with the direction and other iranian politics and losing hope in iranian politics. it's also increasingly people from the conservative camp, people from what should be the base of support for the regime yeah. >> i'm wondering, we heard there about how the reformist candidate pezeshkian wants better relations with the west and with the u.s. how much difference? let's say he were to win, how much difference would that actually make considering how much control the hardliners, especially the ayatollah, have right? the answer to any question about foreign policy. it always starts by pointing out that the supreme leader is the one who dictates foreign policy in iran. the president doesn't have control over that, but there have been cases where a popular, more reformist president has been able to nudge the supreme leader influenced the direction of? foreign policy. we saw that with sun rouhani when he was the president and came in with a very strong mandate to try to improve relations with the west and particularly with the u.s and that led to the nuclear deal in 2015. i think the problem for pezeshkian, if he were to win the election is that he's unlikely to be a sort of power for full influential president by himself. he doesn't come in with a strong base of support from within the political establishment in iran, although he's picked up the backing of people like how much about zarif, the former iranian foreign minister, he has picked up their backing during the election, but he's not someone who prior to a month ago was very influential the figure in iranian politics. he would also be coming in probably with a fairly small mandate in terms of voter turnout and how many people voted for him. and so i think even if he comes in wanting to nudge relations with the u.s. and a better direction. he's going to have very limited space to do that with me iranian system and same presumably with so relations with israel. >> i mean, this comes at times of heightened tensions between iran and israel is escalating war of threats flying back and forth in addition to the actual shooting conflict between israel and it's and iran's powerful proxy, hezbollah in lebanon. so again the fact if, if the reformist candidate were elected, would it's possibly lead to perhaps better relations, maybe with israel, it's a change in the escalation that we've been seeing or is the answer pretty much the same? >> i think it's pretty much the same. it's very hard to imagine that even a popular reform-minded president would be able to change policy there that really is set by not only the supreme leader, but the revolutionary guard and the military establishment, the security establishment in iran. this is a regime where hostility to israel has been baked into its dna since 1979 since it was found that it's a fundamental pillar of the regime. and i think whoever is the president that is likely to continue to be the case, i will be a fascinating election to follow? we'll see whether indeed there is change in that country. we really appreciate your expertise he is read costume. thank you so much 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hurricanes to come during this hype wrath? atlantic season we're learning more about how three sweeping us supreme court decisions just days ago could affect the future of the united states. now, one ruling guts the power of federal agencies to approve regulations. they could have major effects on the environment, public health, and the workplace. in other ruling, the high court said federal prosecutors improperly charged hundreds of january 6 defendants with obstruction. the decision could force prosecutors to reopen at least some of those cases and the conservative court voted in favor of an oregon town that tickets it's homeless residents for sleeping outside the decision rejects the argument of law, violates the constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment. and joining us now from washington dc is jesse rabinowitz. he's the national he's with the national homelessness law center. thank you so much for being here with us. uh, your your organization was heavily involved in the supreme court case. you mobilize i support from around the country, rallied advocates, but the supreme court sided with the city in this case. so i want to read you justice gorsuch, who wrote it makes no difference whether the charge defendant is currently a person experiencing homelessness, a backpacker on vacation, or a student who abandons his dorm room to camp out in protest test on the lawn of a municipal building what do you make of that reasoning basically, it doesn't matter why you're sleeping outside the city has the right to ban it thanks so much for having me, kim it's great to be with you. >> i think we have to be clear that the city of grants pass where this case originated was it very clear in how they enacted this law and they were clear that the only enact this against people experiencing homelessness if your stargazer sleeping outside or if you're for stargazer using a blanket to look up at the sky. you were fine. but for homeless people who had nowhere else to go, they gave people $295 tickets. and when they couldn't pay those tickets through them in jail, that makes homelessness worse. it keeps people trapped in a cycle of poverty and doesn't do anything to solve homelessness i want to ask you what the impact of this according to the department of housing and urban development, almost 600,000 americans are experiencing homelessness more than a quarter million of them don't live in shelters. >> so presumably affects all of those. i mean, what what concretely will this mean for them? >> that's a great question. we're in the middle of a historic housing crisis, and that housing crisis causes homelessness. rents are too high. half of americans pay more than they can afford rent, and nearly one and four worry about becoming homeless instead of focusing on solutions to homelessness like housing and services. the supreme court just made it easier to throw people in jail for sleeping outside that will make homelessness worse. we need to use this moment in time to call on our elected officials for president biden all the way down to local, local elected officials to focus on the true solutions to homelessness, which is why we're calling on president and congress to invest $356 billion in the next year as a down payment towards solving homelessness and ensuring that everybody has a safe place to sleep. >> but i mean, throwing money at the problem may not necessarily be the solution i'm thinking of california, where there are huge homeless encampments in residential areas. i mean, i used to live there they were everywhere. i mean, cities like los angeles say the previous laws handicap them. i want to read you what california's governor gavin newsom wrote. this decision removes the legal ambiguities that have tied the hands of local officials for years and limited their ability to deliver on common sense measures to protect the safety and well-being of our communities. i mean, los angeles, just as an example, is spending $1.3 billion. this year on homelessness. and obviously it isn't working it's going to take more than one year or even a few years to combat the gutting of the social safety net and the lack of affordable housing. >> but we have to stay the course. i'm glad you brought up brought up los angeles, their recent point in time count shows a 10% decrease in homelessness. so that shows that even when they were under the ruling that said you couldn't throw people in jail. they were able to reduce homelessness significantly, which is praiseworthy, that shows that cities don't need to be able to throw people in jail to solve homelessness. they need to focus on the true solution to homelessness, which is housing and services anything else as politicians deflecting blame for their failure to do what is needed to solve homelessness in the meantime, presuming that cities will start enforcing this, maybe clearing out in camp men started giving out tickets. i mean, what can you and other activists, your organization who especially with specializes in legal issues, how can you help them as they are trying to navigate these? the court systems and so on. that might so end up putting them in jail there are a number of legal strategies that we are pursuing. >> we're working with members of congress and state houses across the country to pass legislation that protects the very right let's isn't that the supreme court just got it. we're asking people to join us and calling on the white house and congress to invest 356 billion as a down payment to solving homelessness we have to be honest, the court was never going to solve homelessness. that's not their job. and while we are disappointed, we are not surprised at their decision but this terrible, harmful ruling must force our elected officials to do their jobs and focus on the housing and social supportive services that we know solves homelessness it's really important issue. very happy to have you talking about here with us, jesse rabinowitz. thank you so much for being with us. >> thanks for having me and the supreme court is expected to rule monday on donald trump's immunity claim relating to the 2020 election trump's facing criminal charges for his alleged role in trying to overturn the election the court says monday will be its final day of rulings this year right after the break of shocking upset us olympic trials as one star stumbles on their way to paris while the details next stay with us my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis held me back. >> now, always sky rizzi. i'm all in with clear skin the sky rizzi, three out of four people achieve 90% clear skin at four months and most people were clear even at five years sky rosie, it's just four doses a year after two starter doses, serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms had a vaccine or planned to now the. time ask your doctor about tyrosine. the number one 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who knows what to expect? turns shipping to your advantage. >> keep it simple with clear upfront pricing, with usps ground advantage close captioning is brought to you by christian faith publishing, right? >> for a higher purpose published with us, the christian faith publishing is an author friendly publisher who understands it, your labor is more than just a book called all or scan for your free riders guide, 804, 551827 at the u.s. olympic track and field trials. no. allows shines once again, cnn sports anchor andy scholes joins me now. so andy lyles now has to paris with a chance to make history right? >> yeah, it's right camps. so no allows you to is the reigning fastest man in the world right now? he's gonna get to head to paris with the chance to be the first american since carl lewis 1984 to win the olympic double, which is winning both the 100 meter and 200 meter. and last night and 200 meter final, loud is come in from behind to beat kenny bednarek. this was a record time 19.53 break and michael johnson's u.s. trial is record from 1996 now, but dark finished seconds allows in both 100200, so he's also going to be going for the double now in the women's 200 meter final sha'carri richardson look into qualify and go for the double in paris as well. but she would come up a sort finishing fourth in this race to sha'carri will only be running the 100 and doing relays in paris. gabby thomas, who won bronze and the 200 and tokyo chief in his first booking, her ticket to the game this isn't kind of am i knew i needed to get done and this is the first half and there wasn't a gold medal in paris without making the team today. so i'm just ecstatic and to be alongside you everyone in the finals, just such an amazing race. >> are the men's gymnastics trials. meanwhile, wrap it up in minneapolis and frederick richard becoming the youngest man to win the men's all around the trials since 1972, 20-year-old will lead a us men's team that's trying to earn its first metal since 2008 in richard, who is a tiktok star. so the crowd helped him secure the olympic bid i've started off with a lot of weight. >> this is what decides everything. but then there's thousands of thousands of people just rooting for me in the crowds. thank you guys and we, got to talk about your family first. how did you even get the bim up to your parents? the 43. i didn't i guess my coach did it. i didn't even realize they got it so far, but i mean, they are responsible for everything for creating me and now they, have i mean, now we have an olympian others as a son smile says it all. >> our other women sides, mobiles and good looking to lock-up her third olympic bid, leading by two-and-a-half points going into today's shilese jones meanwhile, has been ruled out for the rest of the competition is not going to be going to perish injured or knee on the vault on friday, jones, who's metal that the last two worlds is just the latest blow to the team skye blakely and kayla the seller, both ruptured their achilles and we'll also unfortunately miss the olympics elsewhere, powerhouse india claiming their first t20 cricket world cup title in 17 years in barbados on saturday, india clean think to a 16 run lead in the last over when suryakumar yadav comes up with an incredible acrobatic catch their tossing the ball back to himself from over the boundary, robbing south africa of a critical six. and that was huge because india would go onto win. i just seven finishing their championship run in defeating. and finally we had one of the sneaky has goals in soccer history last time the mls atlanta, toronto tied at one 97th minute after toronto's goal is secured, the ball tomorrow it's jamal, t area hidden behind him. no one saw that as soon as the goalie watson, ms soon as he puts it down, tr he goes and steals it and would kick it in to win the game for atlanta the entire stadium does not really hurts for toronto. i mean, the referee, sam was about to blow the whistle, an indie game as soon as the gold they would have kicked it. but it said the stolen oh, and it can't be legal. come on that way sneaky. someone someone's got to say the whole stadium man on telling me it's likely it was in atlanta. oh, there you go. all right. any scholes? thank you so much. appreciate it. well. two young pandas, you one and sing bow have just arrived in the u.s. that their new home, the san diego zoo. there the first pandas loaned to the united states and more than 20 years marking return to panda diplomacy between china and the united states there are currently out of public view on the acclimatize to their new surroundings, but are causing plenty of anticipation for the zoo going public. let's continues conservation efforts between the scientists in the u.s and china previous pair left san diego and 2019 now there was controversy at taiwan's golden melody awards while accepting the award for best taiwanese language albums singer and activists, paknia told the audience not to forget china's bloody 1989 crackdown on protesters in china and square chinese artists in recent years have largely stayed away from the awards show. there's renewed tension between taiwan and china, which views the island as its own territory. now chinese singers attended this year's awards, despite several high-profile nominations and wins thousands gathered in greece's second biggest city on saturday to march for lgbtq rights, people dance through the streets of thessaloniki, some holding rainbow flags and silencing love wins a celebration mark the end of euro pride week, which is hosting a different european city every year this was a landmark year for greece after legalizing same-sex marriage in february, it's the first majority orthodox christian country to do so all right, that wraps this hour of cnn newsroom. i'm kim bruen hoover for viewers in north america, cnn this morning is next for the rest of the world is calltoearth, a great spine of africa july 4th. >> cnn 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