street s worse day in more than two years. it s wednesday, september 14th. it is 9 a.m. here in london where queen elizabeth s coffin now rests inside buckingham palace. behind me before the next leg of her final journey begins today. in the hours ahead a procession will take her coffin from the palace to westminster hall. members of the royal family, including king charles, prince william and prince harry, will be walking in that procession. the queen will lie in state at westminster hall starting later today until her funeral on monday at westminster abbey. ahead of that, mourners are camping out in london waiting for their chance to see the queen s coffin and pay their respects. [ applause ] an outburst of emotion outside buckingham palace late tuesday as queen elizabeth arrived home for the last time. the crowd, some who waited in hours in the rain clapped and cheered as they gathered to pay their respects to brittain s longest serving monarch. the queen s coffin had
pence let me down. the panel also cited witnessed who described how trump watched tv for hours as the violent assault unfolded and the committee s republican vice-chair said the dam has begun to break as more pieces of the puzzle fall into place and new witnesses step forward. can a president who is willing to make the choices donald trump made during the violence of january 6th ever be trusted with any position of authority in our great nation again? cnn s manu raju is on capitol hill for us. what do we know about the focus of this committee for future hearings? reporter: well, they haven t decided exactly yet how they will split-up those future hearings in september. the committee members told me last night those are still issues that they are still trying to sort out. they plan to use the next month in august when congress is on recess to have more testimony from witnesses behind closed doors. liz cheney indicating that subpoenas have been issued and committee memb
territory claimed by russia have been liberated. on sunday ukrainian military commander clanld the army had retaken nearly 1200 square miles in two weeks. by monday the official number had doubled. translator: from the beginning of september until today our soldiers have already liberated more than 6,000 square kilometers of the territory of ukraine in the east and south. the movement of our troops continues. the drastic jump in the news is the fact journalists are being denied access to the front lines. u.s. officials refraining from putting out numbers. they say ukrainian soldiers have pushed the soldiers back. clearly we have seen them go on the offensive in the last couple of weeks and actually regain quite a bit of territory. again, i think i ll stay out of quantifying it in too much detail but they are actually taking territory back certainly over the last two weeks during the counter offensive positions. cnn s matthew chance has more from ukraine and russia.
existing think tanks wanted him so team maga has set up their own insurrectionist clubhouse. i ll be joined by the journalist who revealed this maga snake s nest. we ll look at this particular demographic of young men who seem to have the same demographic of disturbing grievances. two parties separated by the atlantic ocean. we are stuck with the party willing to gulp the kool-aid. it goes back to brexit. it was a decision fueled by anti-immigrant hysteria. for many brexiteers, it was the idea to make british great again. save it from cultural mutation. that vote should have been our warning sign. trump echoed the very same anti-immigrant propaganda. when mexico sends its people, they re not sending their best. they re bringing drugs. they re bringing crime. they re rapists. some, i assume, are good people. the political chaos that ensued in brittain eventually led to boris johnson s elevation to prime minister. he promised to finalize brexit, to make it happen. johns
investigating the january 6th attack on the capitol. last week bannon made a last-minute attempt to delay this trial, suddenly offering to testify publicly before the panel. but the trump-appointed judge rejected that motion. cnn s sarah murray is outside the courthouse. what should we expect here? reporter: well, it s definitely slow going this morning so far before they take a lunch break, they had chosen eight jurors. they need to get to 22. they re asking them their awareness of bannon, their awareness of the committee hearings. there are a number of people who said they are aware of the hearings, they ve paid a little attention. it s clear the judge wants to be very careful that he s putting together a jury pool that doesn t have a preconceived motion about whether steve bannon is guilty or innocent in this case. look, there s a lot on the line for steve bannon. he s facing two criminal contempt of congress charges. if he s convicted, he could face anywhere from 30 d