rights become a central issue in the upcoming november midterms. the big picture tonight. the states where abortion will be banned. we re in wisconsin, where one clinic turned away 70 women with abortion appointments. driving more than 20 hours for an abortion. we re in a so-called surge state, where they expect a nearly 400% increase in patients. why the head of planned parenthood calls it a healthcare crisis. and finally, what all parties agree on, that the fight is not over. the part of justice thomas concurring opinion that has critics worried that access to contraception and same-sex marriage is next. this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting tonight from the supreme court. o donnell: good evening, and thank you for joining us on this friday night on a day that changed america. we re outside the supreme court after the landmark decision that overturned roe v. wade and ended a woman s constitutional right to an abortion. as you can see behind m
supreme court. millions of women will go to bed tonight without access to the healthcare that they had this morning. right to life has been vindicated. the voiceless will finally have a voice. half the states could ban virtually all abortions, after a ruling that leaves the nation more divided than ever. this decision is an outrage, forced motherhood is illegitimate. i m absolutely ecstatic there are going to be babies lives saved from this. how will it transform america and will it be a rallying cry for the democrats in the fall? roe is on the ballot. plus, trump s power play. you re asking me to do something against my oath and i will not break my oath. new details on how his pressure campaign to stay in power at all costs nearly worked. and push the country to the brink. the system held, but barely and the question remains will it hold again? welcome to inside politics sunday. i m abby phillip. women of child bearing age in america have now lost a
good morning and welcome to your new day i m alex mar quart. i m amara walker. ten secret service agents exchanged text messages around the date of the insurrection. where the investigation why they weren t saved goes from here. the white house is saying that president joe biden s covid symptoms have improved, but he is taking additional medication to help fight off the virus. the latest on his condition and the questions over why we haven t heard directly from the president s doctor. also, mother nature cranking up the heat. more than 85 million of us are under heat alerts today. and it s only going to get hotter tomorrow. when we ll finally start to cool down. and no one matched all of the winning numbers in last night s mega millions drawing. the astronomical jackpot now on the table in tuesday s drawing. it is saturday, july 23rd. thank you so much for waking up with us. very flnice to be back with you amara. good to be with you, alex. january 6th committe
hitting him?! reporter: disturbing video showing the violent arrest of a young black man following a failed traffic stop. they re using force. they re using a taser. they re wrestling him. they re using a baton. i m definitely having nightmares. reporter: and new russian air strikes on a ukrainian port, just one day after both nations approve a grain export deal. i m pamela brown in washington. you are in the cnn newsroom on this saturday. summer swelter. some 85 million americans have spent the day under heat warnings and advisories. blistering temperatures are baking much of the nation, from its midsection to the northeast, many are seeing triple-digit highs. extreme heat is helping fuel a wildfire near yosemite national park in california. the oak fire has raced across 6,500 acres in two days. there is zero containment and some rural community have said evacuated. and the northeast is taking the brunt of the oppressive heat. tomorrow s boston triathlon has be
lexi, it s such a powerful statement, and the little girl, the little girl who survived by bathing herself in the blood of her best friend who had been shot already to survive. garrett haake, what are your thoughts? reporter: i mean, calling it gut-wrenching doesn t do it justice. miah, the girl who survived, participating remotely from texas having made the decision not to travel here to testify, to me it s the little details of each of those witnesses that kind of caught in my throat, whether it s miah talking about hiding behind the backpacks in the classroom, as though that would do anything, and the doctor talking about treating a girl in a lilo & stitch shirt covered in blood. and lexi won the good citizenship award on the morning she was shot in her classroom. for many people it s too easy to think about these issues in these very broad ways. hearing parents talk about those kinds of specific details, the doctor talking in those specific details, i think that s what