it s 10:00 a.m. in new york. i m lindsey reiser. i ll be joined ace this hour by yasmin vossoughianríz mississippi. she ll have much more on the tornado devastation in a moment. we re also covering major stories around the world. ine1 israel, massive protestsç(% against prime minister benjamin netanyahu. tens of thousands filled the streetsrcnç after the country s right-wing leader abruptly fired the defense minister for challenging netanyahu s plan for overhauling theq judiciary. this morning, sites are grounded and hundreds of thousands on strike. here in new york, backñ1 on indictment match in the president trump caseñr of hundr% moeschlp involving stormy danie. a jury is expected to resume today. we have another report of another witness. we re live. but we begin with the zi. yasmin. reporter: thank you, linsey. in this smalli] town of rolling fork, at the alabama border, desperate recovery efforts are continuing days after a wave of tornadoes tour throughe1
face of these enormous protests which have been going on for months now reached a really xd unprecedented fever pitch in the last 24lp hours, it s thasá the israeli prime minister ise1fá g to back down in some form. and he s going to announce that he is note1 moving ahead, at let for now, with this judicial overhaul. that was at least the expectation when we heard the statement was happening. but it s now been several hourì% of silence and we don t know exactly what sjf going onñr ins benjamin netanyahu s residence. we do know that the far right o1 írj government is very, very unhappy aboutt(xd any possibilif him backing down. they want to see the plan to weaken the israeli supreme court go through.k#h(lc% and as much as we have seen, these very large crowds of mostly, not all, but mostly liberal protesters on the jerusalem over the last couple !m1ñ there is also a large right-wing constituency n this country that supports the prime minister. and the feeling is starting to