i m elizabeth wag meister in los angeles. this is cnn. in just one hour, votes will be cast into new hampshire s first in the nation primary. and we will take you right there tonight on laura coates live. at midnight tonight, six registered voters, yes, six reddit district voters will kick off the crucial new hampshire publican primary care by this time tomorrow, we should have a pretty good idea whether nikki haley can put the brakes on what, so far, seems like a trump juggernaut heading straight for the republican nomination. it is democracy in action. you will see it all live right here. but first, my exclusive interview with vice president kamala harris. we talked about the reversal of roe v. wade and what that means for voters. plus, donald trump s legal woes and her candid reaction to how people view her. it is a wide-ranging conversation, one you will not hear anywhere else but here. and it starts right now. i am so glad you are here. of course, you have decided
retrieved from donald trump s florida home three weeks ago today. as sources say, trump s lawyers still want a neutral third party to go through those records, which included top secret files and information received from spies. today the justice department said its own filter team has done that job already. in a new filing, the justice department revealed its privilege review team as it s called, separate from investigators, identified a limited set of material that may be subject to attorney/client privilege. on thursday a judge will hold a hearing as to whether to assign the special master. the doj also confirmed that it and other intelligence officials are now conducting a damage assessment of those highly sensitive documents that were being improperly stored in mar-a-lago. the director of national intelligence avril haines told congress about this friday, writing in a letter to some house members that her office quote will also lead an intelligence community assessment
hello everyone. thank you for joining us. i m fredicka whitfield in atlanta alongside jim sciutto in israel. we begin in gaza where israeli troops continue to advance as officials say the second stage of their war with hamas has begun. moments ago we learned that president joe biden spoke with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. their conversation comes as national security adviser jake sullivan warned there s an elevated risk of conflict expanding across the region. the idf said their air strikes hit more than 450 hamas targets in the last day including command centers, observation posts and missile launch sites. sources tell cnn that one strike hit a mosque killing 13 people and leaving dozens of others injured. new video from inside gaza published by an israeli newspaper shows idf soldiers raising israel s flag on a hotel roof. cnn has asked the israel defense forces for comment on the video. an analysis by cnn shows that israeli troops have advanced at least two mi
mistake that she did. john? all right. what a fascinating discussion. elizabeth wag meister, thank you so much. just ahead, one of the police officers who fought back the job on january 6 at the u.s. capitol is now running for congress. we will tell you who and hear about his platform. plus, heavy snow, treacherous ice, the trouble spots this weekend as more than 25 million people are john is looking real close i m one of them. i m one of the 25 million. face winter storm alerts.
new in morning, brought to a breaking point, jips gee rose blanchard is speaking out after serving eight years in prison after pleading guilty to helping kill her abusive mother. blanchard was the victim of munchausen symptom by proxy, a mental health for a caregiver that injuries a child to get attention. elizabeth joins us now. what did she have to say? john, i sat down with jips gee rose blanchard yesterday and she says that when she went to prison it was the best day of her life. not something i had ever heard. she said it was her first taste of freedom. i also asked her what life would be like if her mother was still here today. this is what she told me. i think that if my mother were still here, i would still be under this abusive, medical