it changes people s lives. a whole range of things that are game changers for ordinary folks. when you sit down at the kitchen table at the end of the month, you ll be able to pay a whole hell of a lot more bills. plus disaster and death in kentucky. the president just landing there, pledging the federal government will help the state recover. and documentary evidence of a potential trump crime. a new picture shows a photo of a toilet stuffed with white house documents. president biden the bill cleared the senate sunday and is due for a house vote this week. it included some concessions, a major to cap the cost of insulin stripped out of the final bill. a minimum tax on large corporations was watered down. but the substance of the final product is hugely significant. giant first-time investments in climate protections and long-sought changes to how americans pay for health care and their prescription drugs. step back and look at the long arc and the president s legi
next up is the house, and they plan to take up the bill on friday. it s expected to pass, again, along party lines just as it did in the senate. once that happens, the white house plans to seize the momentum. while the president will be talking about this and explaining it absolutely to the american people and what it will look like is trying to explain in very practical terms why this matters for people s lives. the president will, our entire team will be out making the case. obviously right now we re focused on the last steps in this process, getting the bill through the house and to the president s desk for signature. let s go live to the capital and cnn s jessica dean. jes jessica, there are some wide-reaching provisions in this bill. lay it out for us. yeah, there s a lot in this bill. you mentioned that it s headed to the house. that s what comes next after senate democrats notched a big victory on something that frankly many of them didn t think they would see. t
cnn through the crime scene. plus, she s the one that we wanted and treasured. singer, actress, and icon olivia newton-john passes away. hello, and welcome to the lead. i m pamela brown in for jake tapper. we begin with our politics lead. president biden began his week on the cusp of a huge win for his party. the senate this weekend in a marathon voting session passed the democratic branded inflation reduction act strictly along party lines. every single republican voted against it. the bill now heads to the house. it is expected to pass along party lines there as well. and president biden could sign it into law as soon as friday. the massive $750 billion bill contains sweeping health care provisions, tax increases on wealthy corporations, and the largest climate investments in u.s. history. and this comes as the president and first lady tour eastern kentucky, where hellish flooding killed more than three dozen people and caused catastrophic damage to communities. presi
sir keir starmer says labour will not be campaigning to take the country back into the eu. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are aletha adu, who is a political correspondent at the daily mirror and john stevens, deputy political editor from the daily mail. let s take a look at tomorrow s front pages: the sun reports on a premier league international footballer being arrested on suspicion of rape. the times reports that the police have been told to get tough on petrol protestors. the mail takes a similar line on the same story and reports that police are being urged to use their powers to stop the go slow protests. the front page of the daily express features a story on the possibility of tax cuts for 30 million people to help with the cost of living crisis. the mirror also concentrates on a political story but they re reporting on the fact borisjohnson was made aware of a formal complaint about chris pincher s behav
many bird colonies in the uk. we ve been given special access to the islands to see the scale of the outbreak. live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s newsday. it s six in the morning in singapore, ”pm in london and five in the evening in chicago, where police are still searching for the gunman who killed six people at a fourth ofjuly parade. the independence day event had barely begun at highland park some 50 kilometres north of chicago, when a volley of shots rang out. police say they ve found a gun, but not the shooter himself. this report from our correspondent nomia iqbal. the independence day parade had just started. americans in this wealthy chicago suburb were out in the sunshine, celebrating the day their country became an independent nation. gunshot are you kidding me right now? ten minutes in, shots rang out. let s go! there was confusion and panic. people moved quickly for safety. stay on the side. i remember hearing shootings, going, like, ts