part out loud right now, on laura coates live. the so it all went down behind closed doors, signed by people who want him to win the most. president joe biden making an admission of sorts saying quote, if trump wasn t running, i m not sure i would be running. now look we all remember he entered the rate over what happened in charlottesville, talking about battling for the soul of the nation. it was obvious to everyone then that trump was the catalyst. but tonight statements, have gone a little different for some reason. maybe because he was in a room full of donors, maybe because his campaign has wanted to focus on health care this week, and his desire to have another four years to finish the job he started. the question people are asking tonight, when you already have the polling by the way that shows people might not be too thrilled with a relapse, between the two of them, isn t a lack of enthusiasm on his part? is it just recognizing on his part, that trump represents an o
welcome to all of you watching us in the united states, canada and around the world. i m kim brunhuber. ahead on cnn newsroom, supplies are run ning low in gaza creatig an even more desperate situation for residents. cnn crews have seen heavy idf activity in gaza overnight. plus a colorado judge calls donald trump an insur ex-ist. an entire town in iceland as a nearby volcano appears ready to erupt. it s 5:00 a.m. here in atlanta. noon in israel, exactly six weeks after the attacks of october 7th that launched the war against hamas. israeli media is reporting the death toll of the music festival in southern israel was far higher than anyone realized. citing ab israeli police report, the death toll now stands at 364, up from 270. we have also learned 17 of those killed were police officers, and 40 people at the have been were taken hostage. israeli authorities don t believe the terrorists knew about the festival beforehand. for civilians in gaza, the situation on the gro
down to a 4-day week so there isn t a lack of childcare on friday will: hourly workers. joey: that s the thing. the whole point is there s not a one size fits all. this industry could work in a 4-day workweek, this one different, but the schools, if they go to a 4-day, what about the people who have to work on friday? it d have to be a cultural shift. we d all have to be ondwoard with it. concern onboard with it. ultimately, what do you cowith your kids if you re having to work on friday but they don t have to go to school? rachel: yeah. they ll come up with some government childcare where they ll spend the whole i m the indoctrinating your kids joey: i m not against it, we just all have to do it, and congress that works. rachel: all right. turning now to your headlines starting with a fox news alert, at least one person is killed in a miami shooting last night. that sent spring breakers running. it erupted during a relative thely calm evening and at least one is in custody, and on
state with a seemingly endless drought. we pray for rain. the challenge, of course, is storing it. although right now, it seems that it isn t a lack of money but urgency and political will, most of this will be lost. not something that happened overnight but cumulative effect of these water cutbacks continue year after year. from drought to record setting rain. we have the most variable climate in the country. because of that, california needs to store more water. challenge is where to put it. the time to get these dam projects is ridiculous. california hasn t built a new dam in 40 years. with environmental opposition stopping new major reservoirs like this one. we only have so many good notches in the mountains. and most of those good notches collegially have dams on them. for decade s california s network of pumps and canals kept
back home, she wakes herfour children with the last of the milk. 17 people live in this house to keep costs low. translation: to save food, i put the children on a diet. l we used to eat three times a day, but now we only eat lunch and dinner. i don t know what will happen later. maybe next month, when the prices increase, we won t be able to eat. no matter how hard you work, if the prices are just going up, then it s basically nothing. so as you can see, the problem here isn t a lack of food, the problem is the price of it. the average filipino is already spending around 60% of their wages on food bills. one of the reasons food is so expensive here is because this country has to import many products because the philippines doesn t grow enough food to feed its own people.