major consequences for all americans. just one hour from now the federal reserve is expected to roll out its eighth straight interest rate hike. experts, executives and the markets all hope it will be one of the smallest yet. just a few blocks away, down at the white house, president biden and house speaker kevin mccarthy will sit down for their first stare-down since mccarthy became speaker over the debt ceiling. if one doesn t blink soon, you can say goodbye to federal elt benefits and hello to a financial meltdown, all courtesy of your representatives on capitol hill. let s start with cnn s matt egan over at the fed. matt, is today the day that jerome powell starts to pump the brakes on these interest rate hikes? it certainly looks that way. it would be a big surprise if that didn t happen. fed officials have been dropping hints, strong hints for weeks now that they do plan to dial back this war on inflation today. the thinking is that the fed goes from a 50 basis poin
good wednesday morning. i m erica hill. i m jim sciutto. tornado warnings in effect for parts of the southwest. this after severe storms yesterday. more than a dozen tornados reported tearing across the south. look at these pictures here. homes, buildings disappearing. we ll speak with the mayor of deerpark, texas. new this morning, germany will send those leopard 2 tanks to ukraine and it comes as the u.s. is sending abram tanks to ukraine. bottom line, is it enough? we begin with those destructive tornados slamming parts of texas and louisiana. rosa flores is in pasadena, texas, with more. rosa? reporter: this tornado activity was so powerful. let me show you what we re seeing on the ground. this was a power pole that simply snapped. if you look down, you ll see a mangled piece of metal wrapped around parts of the debris and the rest of the pole is back here. beyond the pole you see it s shear devastation. there s a trailer that s turned on its side. it s upside dow
from the police academy on march 31st. i just swore him in and his family was there to witness his journey to become a police officer. he was struck. in the head. engaged in this incident. nick has come out of brain surgery. and is in critical but stable condition as we speak. our coverage of this tragedy starts with cnn s adrian broadus , who s in louisville, kentucky . for us there. police say the gunman was a current employee of the bank, and a law enforcement source says the gunman knew he was going new. he was going to be let go from his job. at least four people are dead, nine others injured, including at least two police officers after a mass shooting at a bank in downtown louisville, three, which are in critical condition. including our officer. three who are listening, non critical condition and three who have been treated and released. police say one of the two injured officers is a rookie, the officer who was in critical condition today. officer nicholas wilt. 26 y
documents to the archivists. that s what they did as soon as they realized what was the documents were there. and his team is cooperating fully with the review. again, there s a review happening by the doj. we re going to let the process move forward. just to follow up on the question. given the position you re holding right now, there are no assurances that you can provide that there s no other classified documents out there? yes, this is an ongoing process. i ll let the process continue. it s being reviewed by the department of justice and i m going to leave it there. you referenced the counsel s statements that there s limitations to what you can say at this point in time. do those limitations extend to everything beyond what the special counsel said monday night and what the president said last night? the white house counsel, my colleagues are here to answer questions on this particular issue. i m just going to let them speak to this. they put out monday a very
how there are backups? neil: you know what? the problems are not over yet. you re looking live at atlanta airport. airlines are struggling to get back on track after all flights were grounded because of a nationwide computer glitch. we don t flow what caused the glitch. close to 8,000 domestic flights delayed, more than 1,200 cancelled altogether and wore all over it with steve harrigan in atlanta and how folks are dealing with it there and how transportation committee members nancy mace on calls for investigations to what happened here. welcome, everybody. i m neil cavuto. let s get to it in atlanta with steve harrigan. steve, how are things looking there now? neil, planes are taking off and landing again. you can tell from the numbers here, this airport, the busiest in the world is empty today. no lines, no people. a long way from back to normal here. of course, what happened in the early hours this morning, almost unprecedented. you have to go back to 9-11. a complete