making the headlines but today it s his dad who is stealing the limelight and not necessarily for the right reasons. alfie haaland says he was escorted from his seat following manchester city s equaliser in their 1 1 draw at real madrid in the first leg of their champions league semi final tie on tuesday night. a video on social media appears to show haaland taunting the home fans before being removed from his box. there had been reports that he had also thrown food at the supporters but he insists that isn t true. later, city and real may get an idea of who they could face in the final as rivals ac milan take on inter milan in theirfirst leg a first meeting between the two sides in the champions league since 2005. they share the stadium but ac milan are the home team for this leg. they ve been sweating on the fitness of rafael leao, their star forward trained away from the group on tuesday. just two points separate the teams in serie a, and milan defender fikayo to
in a sign of the urgency of the moment, we learned that the president will be cutting his trip to asia short so that he can get back to washington to negotiate. nbc s kelly o donnell has more on the two sides and what they are saying tonight. tonight, new signs of progress and a major change of plans. i m cutting my trip short, postponing the australia portion of the trip, and the stop in pop in new guinea. tomorrow, the president will head to japan for the g7 summit of the world s largest economies. he will skip plant stops in australia, and pop what new guinea to get back to negotiations. we re just getting started. mr. biden, joined today by the vice president, holding his second face to face talks with congressional leaders. afterwards, speaker mccarthy struck a notably more optimistic tone. it is possible to get a deal by the end of the week. it s another difficult to get to an agreement. at stake, raising the nation s credit card limits, or debt ceiling ab
3.4%. black unemployment a lowest ever level of 4.7%. job gains in health care, in the restaurant industry, construction, wages climbing, us is purltives are plenty. but yes, also disruptive. the fed suggesting this week it might be done with interest rate hikes, but these jobs numbers spiking after a downward trnd the past three months underlies the effect to cool the economy to tame inflation. let s get to new york and matt egan. walk us through the big numbers, and forgive me if i have to interrupt. this historic jobs boom continues. despite everything going on now, despite the fed slamming the brakes on the economy, despite the worst banking crisis since 2008, and despite the wave of tech layoffs we keep hearing about, people thought hiring would slow down in april. instead, it accelerated. 253,000 jobs added. 3.4% unemployment rate. to go low you have to go back to 1953 under dwight eisenhower. we saw across the board solid numbers here. professional services, health c
stress when in fact it s causing mental illness, anxiety, depression, suicidal thinking. john: welcome back as america reports rolls into hour number two. i m john roberts in washington. that s pretty stunning, sandra. sandra: really serious stuff. sandra smith in new, i don t. all new at 2:00, we speak to a mother who lost her son to suicide. she blames years of heavy cannabis use that made her son s delusions worse. her story and her warning just ahead. as we top a brand-new hour, any moment now we are set to see the pentagon take questions as u.s. troops remain stationed at the southern border with thousands of migrants still making their way into this country. president biden claiming the crisis is far less serious than some feared. how do you think things are going at the border, sir? much better than y all expected. john: the president claims things are looking great, more than 83,000 migrants were detained in just the past week, and given court dates to app
here and what would happen if the borrowing ceiling is not lifted? my colleague samira hussain has been investigating. first of all, this debt ceiling crisis is actually a political crisis. itjust happens to hinge on a must pass piece of legislation to save the nation from economic catastrophe. so, what exactly is happening here? weeks to go before the federal government is unable to pay its bills. well, the us government spends more money that it brings in. so it needs to borrow money to pay its bills. it can only borrow a certain amount of money. and if it needs to borrow more, congress has to approve that. it used to be a routine thing, but not any more. republicans see this as an opportunity to extract demands, like cuts to affordable housing or other social security spending. but us presidentjoe biden says, no way. you need to pass this legislation with no strings attached. so off to the white house the two warring political parties go to try and work it out. but th