crime. i would say yeah. a lot of people getting shot around here. lawrence: safety is on the ballot cross country we re three days out from election day and crime crisis at the top and public is a football. violence bleating from one city and suburbs and beyond we once demandeddibilityibility and justice now there s a rerevolving door for repeat offenders police are with denial and finger pointing. but regardless of politics, lives are being forever chained cut short by laws on their side. when you cast your vote on tuesday you may want to ask, which side is your candidate on? and nowhere is that question more relevant than in new york. where violent crime has landed literally on the doorstep of gubernatorial candidate lee. and he joins me now. thanks so much for joining the program tonight so i ve been reading your literature i ve seen some of the stuff that you ve been putting out there. you said you re doing to declare a crime emergency on day one. what does that mean
they know we can do it. we have american grit in our blood, they will going to vote republican november 8. send dr. oz back to new jersey, send to us dc. fight together together we stand divided we fall. i m running for the united states senate, paula i m running to win. god bless ugod bless america. live free or die. dana: bringing in our panel, james freeman from wall street journal editorial page, matt gorman for national republican congressional committee and vice president of targeted victory. and you all know jessica tarlov. one of my co-hosts, don t look now, james but the heading over past 5 days look really good for republicans, is it as it has been. i thought in spring it would be ain t inflation election. i think a lot of democrats maybe hoped for some glimmer of good news in last week s inflation report, they didn t get it, i think that voters done need that official government didn t need that official government pronouncement to note that prices
i declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to yourservice. o donnell: the global reaction. condolences pour in from leaders around the world, and her iconic encounters with presidents, first as princess and then queen, dancing and riding through 70 years of history. and finally, the queen s legacy. we talked to former prime minister john major. and we look back at her life, not just as monarch, but mother. her devotion to her family. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. o donnell: good evening to our viewers in the on this historic thursday night. the world is mourning queen elizabeth ii who died this afternoon at the age of 96, surrounded by family at her summer home in scotland. earlier in the day, buckingham palace announced that her majesty, who ruled over the commonwealth for a record 70 years, was placed under medical supervision. her doctors were concerned about h
u.s. economy added some 261,000 jobs in october, the unemployment rate ticked up slightly to 3.7%. that jobs figure lower than the month before, however, still higher than economists had forecast. cnn chief business correspondent christine romans joins us to break down the numbers. you always say wisely the trend is your friend. so what do these latest numbers show us about the trend in the job market and is this what the fed was looking for? so first i would call this resilient but slowing the rate of job growth here. 261,000 net new jobs added, you know, that is a strong showing in any economy, but the trend is important here. we re averaging about 400 and change a month this year and this is the slowest pace of job creation in almost two years. so still strong, still resilient, but starting to slow here. the government noting that that unemployment rate has been stuck in this 3.5 to 3.7% range since march. it s still stuck in that range, even after six months now of the
more than 60% of flights canceled. also tonight the water crisis. more than 100,000 without water. new reporting from jackson, mississippi where the system has failed again. border emergency. the bitter chill colliding with the crush at the border. many forced to sleep on the streets. plus the bus of migrants dropped off at vice president kamala harris s home on one of the coldest nights of the year. plane down. the crash landing into an icy creek. the kayaker who jumped into action to pull the pilot to safety. holiday spending up. way up. but tonight the new rules. shorter windows and added fees. what you need to know so you don t get burned on your returns. and inspiring america. when ten strangers knocked at the door, a buffalo family turned a winter disaster into shelter from the storm. announcer: this is nbc nightly news with lester holt. and good evening. i m tom llamas, in for lester. tonight the images are coming in and the reports on this deadly blizz