to martha s vineyard in massachusetts and even to the doorstep of the vice president s residence in d.c. we re going to have much more on that in just a moment. but gets begin with jeremy diamond live at the white house on the very late night and early morning negotiations to avert this rail strike. what are you learning about the deal, jeremy? 20 hours of negotiations between the union leaders. the railway companies and also involved the white house and the labor secretary marty walsh. president biden was being kept updated throughout the day yesterday. the negotiations began at 9:00 a.m. yesterday and they ended at 5:00 a.m. today with this tentative agreement that is now going up to the union s membership for a vote. that is expected to pass. because these union leaders say they would have not have struck the deal if they didn t believe it had the support of the membership. let s get into the details. a 24% wage increase over five years from 2020 through 2024. an immedia
bombings and rocket fire in gaza tonight, casualties mounting as questions grow over whether israel s prime minister new that hamas had an attack plan a year ago, i ll ask his senior adviser. plus, to hell with this place. the parting quote of george santos, his office already locked already changed and his name above the office gone. so now what happens to his seat? and an exclusive new reporting this hour, house speaker mike johnson promoting a book full of baseless conspiracy theories and homophobic insults some directed at pete buttigieg and he s out front to respond. let s go outfront. and good evening, i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, hamas once again firing rocks now deep into israel. our team in sderot hearing the rocket fire from northern gaza. this is the aftermath that you are looking at now of israeli strikes in the town. both sides blaming the other. the reality is this. more people are dying and the onslaught of war is continuing and 136 people are
said, governor greg abbott cincinnati april has bused thousands of migrants to new york, chicago and here to washington, d.c. although most of them have been dropped off at union station, the major train station just a few miles down the road. a very few outside of the vice president s home. in this case the hundred or so people who arrived have been moved to a local church as they figure out where to go next. gabe, thank you so much for that. so the situation in d.c. has been building for months. now massachusetts is a new target. migrants sent to martha s vineyard byron desantis and they re left with very limited resources to handle the planes arriving yesterday afternoon. miguel markez is live in martha s vineyard with this. miguel, what is happening? yeah, we ve just gotten on the ground here and talking to folks. this is all a very, very sudden, we re at the airport where they had about 20 minutes notice
thousands of refugees arriving every single day since russia invaded ukraine. miguel markez is at a train station in bucharest. they ve not seen anything like this since world war ii, i understand? it feels like we are stuck in a film from world war ii. train stations have now become a lifeline, not just in kyiv, not just in poland, but everywhere. this is the bucharest central station. we just had two trains come in. hundreds of people pouring off. most of them seem to be refugees. just a couple of bags, maybe a pet carrier. i want to show you something over here. they have several refugee centers set up in the train station now. this one caught our interest, trying to be respectful of people who may have just got off the train, they might not want a camera in their face. we have breast feeding mothers with kids who have just arrived here. officials here in romania say
session to address the rapid rise in cases there. miguel markez is in kentucky this morning. put this in perspective for us. how bad is the covid situation there? reporter: it s bad. it is as bad as its ever been. it is worse than it s ever been. cases are up, higher than in the winter time. hospitalizations are climbing rapidly. deaths are starting to climb as well. and that is that s the same old song that we ve seep for so long. that the cases go up, the hospitalizations rise and then the deaths follow a short time after that. they re having a very difficult time getting ahold of this even though kentucky falls in the middle of vaccinations. it is about the total population, about 50% of the population here is vaccinated. so they re doing okay compared to other states. but that delta variant is just so contagious. it is making people very, very sick. we are in morehead kentucky at