with ten hours left of a pandemic-era immigration policy border officials are seeing more than 10,000 encounters with migrants every day. so what happens tonight at midnight? homeland security secretary alejandro mayorkas just addressed that. and the debt ceiling standoff intensifies as the white house takes the inflation reduction act off the negotiating table. what s next and which states could get hit hardest if the u.s. defaults. and another reason to get the snoring partners to a doctor. a study shows sleep apnea is linked to damage in the brain. we are following these major developing stories and more coming in right here to cnn news central. just moments ago the secretary of homeland security hardened his message to migrants saying, quote, the u.s. border is not open. his comments come hours before the end of title 42, that s the public health rule that the u.s. used nearly 3 million times to immediately expel undocumented people under pandemic restrictions. co
lost in florida and in texas each. california could lose more than 800,000 jobs. and you can see hundreds of thousands of jobs disappearing from new york, ohio, pennsylvania, and really this is a sampling. no state would be spared here. it shows, i think, the enormous stakes during this negotiation and the importance of getting a deal done, which is why it was startling to hear former president trump last night dismissing a default, dismissing the ramifications as maybe nothing. he said it could be perhaps a bad week or a bad day. that is really the opposite of what we re hearing from experts. today i asked the top federal consumer financial watchdog, he leads the consumer financial protection bureau, i asked about trump s comments, and he didn t want to comment directly but made it clear he has the opposite view. he said there would be borrowing cost spikes, likely job loss, said, quote, a lot of things we
coming in right here to cnn news central. just moments ago the secretary of homeland security hardened his message to migrants saying, quote, the u.s. border is not open. his comments come hours before the end of title 42, that s the public health rule that the u.s. used nearly 3 million times to immediately expel undocumented people under pandemic restrictions. communities along the border have been experiencing a surge in migrants ahead of that policy change. a source says the u.s. government is estimating more than 150,000 people are waiting to cross in northern mexico alone. let s take you to the southern border and cnn s nick valencia live for us in brownsville. nick, a big question is about the misinformation that some of these migrants have been receiving. the folks that you re speaking to there on the ground, are they
question, the white house rolling out these new policies about asylum this week, announcing these new processing centers. the question ultimately is, why it took so long for them to roll these out if they knew title 42 was set to expire? what was the answer mayorkas gave you? yeah, that s exactly right. listen, the secretary of homeland security came out here with two messages. one he wanted to make clear that u.s. border is not open and that anybody who comes to the border and crosses unlawfully will be presumed ineligible for asylum automatically under the new immigration rules. the second thing he wanted to make clear the administration has been preparing for today, preparing with a new asylum rules, by surging resources to the border and several other measures. as you pointed out the question i asked the secretary, we heard president biden say a couple days ago that situation at the southern border is going to be, quote, chaotic for a while, as title 42 expires, and, so i asked h