it doesn t look like that s where president zelenskyy is viewing this war right now. he s not leaving bakhmut any time soon given his comments to wolf blitzer. thank you so much. thank you. and be sure to tune in tomorrow to see more of wolf blitzer s exclusive interview with ukrainian president zelenskyy. it airs tomorrow night at 9:00 p.m. lawmakers in mississippi are considering a controversial bill that would create an unelected and instead state appointed court system for the capital city of jackson. ahead, why critics are comparing it to apartheid and jim crow for the predominantltly black city. delicious anany time of day.e only from ihop. download the app and earnn free food with every orderer.
city. the question is will it deprive ukraine of its ability to launch a spring offensive when the ground dies up. you brought up the wagner group and the ukrainian side is suggesting the opposite, they view this since there s tension between its leader and the kremlin at this point. they are running out of convicts to throw into battle there so many ukrainians are viewing this as a point to weaken them more so they don t have to continue fighting valwagner in future ti. what do you make of that? as we are encircling bakhmut it remains to be seen if the ukrainian military is able to execute such a maneuver
and this is a question i genuinely do not know the answer to and i ve been digging through all morning to try to find it. in 2021 there were additional judges added there in heinz county sponsored or paid for by the state through the c.a.r.e.s. act. 2022, more judges through the american rescue plan. those appointments expired in january. part of the circuit court system they were under the purview or the cases were assigned by senior circuit judges. how would this be different than what the state did in 2021 and 2022? it would be different in the sense that under this bill, the supreme court justice would appoint those judges and he currently does that. but the distribution of cases, where the cases would assigned by a senior judge. under ccid they would not be
fighting has had a heavy toll on ukrainian forces. given that, u.s. defense secretary lloyd austin even suggested continuing to fight for control of a city may not bow in ukraine s strategic longer term interest it clear that the fight for es are not leaving. translator: this is tactical for us. we understand that after bakhmut they could go further. it would be an open road for the russians after bakhmut to other towns in ukraine in the donetsk direction. that s why our guys are standing there. chief foreign affairs correspondent at the wall street journal joins us now.
way to solve this is to have the district of columbia become the 51st state. of course, that is politically problematic and some say constitutionally problemic, yet the injustice, it s a clear injustice, continues. let me point out, put a final point on it, that d.c., you know, for decades a majority black city, not having a voting representative in the house or the senate. and, of course, the objection is mostly from republicans, not wanting a liberal enclave to have an extra senator or exactly or two senators. they would have two senators and republicans figure and they re right that this would make them harder to win and keep a senate majority if there are two votes likely to both go to democrats, two new senate votes likely to go to democrats.