continues for monday. there is not a single moment without a line of mourners inside westminster hall. many of them, as you can see here, wiping away tears during their final moments with the queen. in sandringham, the late queen s winner retreat, the prince and princess of wales made their first outing with their new title and prince william told one woman yesterday s procession brought back terribly sad memories of his mother s funeral. i can understand that. back to what is happening in london later, with a look at the royals multimillion dollar fortune and how they make their money and what it pays for, and first, president biden is breathing easier today, even though he might be a bit tired. he averted a quote catastrophe, the words of his labor secretary, by getting rail companies and the workers union to come to a tentative deal. it happened at 4:30 this morning. that may be why he might be a little tired, two hours after the sun came up, after a long night of negoti
hello. i m victor blackwell. welcome to cnn newsroom. four weeks before the election and cnn has a new poll for what americans think of their government right now. views of joe biden has improved over the summer. it s up to 44%, up from 38% in july. but the national outlook on the economy is still bleak. only 22% of americans rate economic conditions as good. most americans have no confidence that biden, congress, really the federal government as a whole, are doing enough to address the economy or the other major issues facing the country. cnn political director david tallian is here to break down the new numbers. let s start with the approval rating. 44%, better than july. still not where he wants to be, under water right now. how could this impact the midterms? take us through the numbers. here s the 44%. you d rather be on the uptick than the decline. biden will take this. but it s not necessarily where a president would like to be this close to the midterm election. h
with stress. rachel: it s called cow therapy. it s cow therapy. yes, to rower your low lower your heart rate. i don t know how we all feel right now, but i will, i will say that, you know, it was really fun. and, by the way, i got to feed two of the cows simultaneously. so i guess that s what it feels like to have twins. will: they say the cow s heart rate is lower than ours, so our heart rate will match theirs or slow down. i think their brain waves are also a little slower rachel: do you not love cows? will: i like cows. yeah, i like cows. rachel: and he were rescued from possibly becoming veal. pete: they ve lost their biggest upside. if you had twins, you normally don t slaughter them when they re big and fat and juicy rachel: babies too. pete: these were saved from veal farms, i think, so hair life their life is a little bit better, but they will never be as tasty. [laughter] will: just feels weird. pete: for now, we cuddle with them. rachel: we had goat yoga, an
picked special master. this is really a put up or shut up moment for team trump. judge raymond dearie ordering the trump team to back up his out of court claims that the fbi somehow planted evidence during their search of mar-a-lago. back it up or put up or shut up as they say. the search that turned up more than 100 classified documents. the judge wants it to give him a sworn declaration with a list of specific items they claim were planted. that s the thing. this is about facts. it s about evidence. you can t just make wild accusations in court without a shred of evidence even if that is your main m.o. out in the court of maga opinion. the judge also considering testimony from, quote, witnesses with knowledge of the relevant facts and let s not forget the former president would have you believe he could declassify documents just by thinking about it, which is not a thing. senate republicans not buying that either. up here we take it very seriously. people can get hurt. pe
someone who fought so long and hard. there i think the solution is to figure out how not to do it again. turns at your university like jimmy s idea. and matt a matter of weeks, there isn t a yearlong clause to investigate what went wrong in afghanistan, produce a report of their findings. they batted jimmy the undergraduate to not only take the graduate level class, but to be an unofficial co-professor. a retired u.s. ambassador and patterson. jimmy was basically the founder, the branch behind the course. and he was a huge benefit because jamie had, on the ground experience, in afghanistan. my first class was that. jimmy, when it came to yale, i think showed us that education to service is to. his service to the country didn t and when he stopped being a navy seal and serving an active combat. this idea that this is a new phase of this service to the country. and that he was there to learn something so that the world would be better. the class spent months speakin