as some states rush to ban abortions, others work to protect them. hours ago mississippi certifying the state s trigger law that makes nearly all abortions in the state illegal. we re following all the developments and the supreme court s latest decision that sticks with a familiar trend, dismantling the separation of church and state. first to cnn national correspondent nadia in mississippi. nadia, talk to us about the state s latest move and where it falls in the big picture. well, we knew that the state s first female attorney general, lynn finch, was a big supporter of overturning roe v. wade. it was a matter of time before she certified the trigger law in mississippi. that happened just this morning. so now there s a ten-day period where the clinic behind me, the state s last abortion clinic can continue to perform abortions. today they are not performing abortions. the clinic is closed, but they will begin again tomorrow and for the next nine days after that. once tho
Difficult to handle that. Quadrupled the costs. It is very difficult to handle that. What does it say about difficult to handle that. What does it say about trust . Difficult to handle that. What does it say about trust . There difficult to handle that. What does it say about trust . There will difficult to handle that. What does it say about trust . There will be. Difficult to handle that. What does| it say about trust . There will be an argument made to rishi sunak and members of the government, and conservative mps like bim, you have broken a promise, if you like, you have done it on other quite key issues to do with raising taxes, for example, why would we believe anything that you promise now . It is anything that you promise now . It is a really good anything that you promise now . It 3 a really good question. It anything that you promise now . It 1 a really good question. It kind of ties in with what bim was saying a few minutes ago about why the management of this matters. What
beijing does not want to unseat the united states as the world s superpower, but xi jinping tells president biden china s absorption of taiwan is inevitable. we will take you this hour to san francisco where the asia pacific countries are sitting down for a working lunch. in the uk rishi sunak s government will present new legislation to set aside the supreme court s ban on sending asylum seekers to rwanda. but backbench mps want assurances from number ten the bill will be tight enough to prevent future legal challenges. and what about labour. a party of government or a party of protest. the shadow front bench staged a mass rebellion last night, over keir starmer s stance on a ceasefire in gaza. we will get the thoughts on all of that from our panel tonight. with us labour sjohn mctiernan, formerly tony blair director of political operations. also here tara setmeyer, former communications director for the republican party, and now a resident scholar at the university of vir
begin this sunday with some breaking news overseas. israeli minister benny gantz has resigned leaving the israeli war cabinet without a singling centrist. he accused prime minister benjamin netanyahu of standing in the way of real victory and called for new election in israel this fall. last month, gantz publicly demanded that netanyahu lay out a plan for gaza s future after the war or else he and the opposition party would pull out of the coalition. yet that hue hasn t yet announce a plan after the war against hamas ends. this is the most significant act of protest within the israeli government since october 7th when the leaders of all the top political parties united to form an emergency government to prosecute the war in gaza. now without gantz a man many western and arab leaders considered a pragmatic and centrist influence, the question now becomes who will steer this ship? already one of israel s most reactionary figures is demanding a seat at the table. the minister of
cervical cancer is a horrible way to die. i just wanted to add, we cannot forget that in the midst of this executive order, there is a big drug company that made millions of dollars because of this mandate. we can t deny that. what are you suggest something. what i m saying is that it s wrong for a drug company, because the governor s former chief of staff was the chief lobbyist for this drug company. the drug company gave thousands of dollars in political donations to the governor. and this is just flat-out wrong. the question is sit about life or was it about millions of dollars and month tpotentially, billions for a drug company. you need to respond? yes, sir. the company was merck. and it was a $5,000 contribution that i had received from them. i raise about $30 million. if you re saying that i can be bought for $5,000 i m offended. he cannot be bought but keeping them honest he doesn t answer whether he can be influenced by this man. he served as perr