looking to enter the u.s. in the next few hours. do not risk your life and your life savings only to be removed from the united states. we are making it very clear that our border is not open, that crossing irregularly is against the law. cnn s nick valencia is in brownsville, texas, on the southern border, where officials are working with buses and airlines to try to get migrants out of that city. nick, is that working? reporter: well, we got some clarity from the city, just a short time ago, jake. we asked them where they re going to be sending migrants to. and they said the destinations that migrants are asking to go to and that the city is going to help them get to include chicago, dallas, houston, brooklyn, denver and miami. and though the city is known for quite some time along with the state and really the nation that title 42, this policy is going to end in less than a day, they re still working out the specifics of their plans and things they want to avoid acco
tales of traumatic atrocity. and the most difficult years of his career. the billionaire businessman sir richard branson tells the bbc he thought he was going to lose his entire empire in the pandemic. hello, i m sally bundock. a new wave of russian airstrikes is under way in ukraine, with reports of explosions in kyiv and the southern cities of zaporizhzhia and odesa. the raids come a day after russia accused ukraine of carrying out a drone attack on the kremlin it what it claimed was an attempt to assassinate president putin. ukraine has rejected accusations that it was responsible. vincent mcaviney reports. flying in from the left, what appears to be a drone, then an explosion over the kremlin. this footage is explosion over the kremlin. this footage is unverified explosion over the kremlin. this footage is unverified but the kremlin says early on wednesday morning, two drones targeted the residents of the president. moscow quick to blame ukraine saying that no one was inj
has something to say and we wanted to give them more time to say it. they re an hour long with some of the most compels people in america. news anchors, lawmakers, people having thoughts we never thought of before. you may have seen a few minutes here on previous shows. tonight we re focusing on a few people. that would include j.p. sears, mike tyson and a man who treats people as they re dying. an end of life physician called christopher kerr. first we re going to look back at a conversation with someone that has passed, kirstie allie that died this fall of cancer. she was on our set and we had a remarkable conversation. here s part of us. for our viewers that know you well, this is to remind them why they like you so much. here it is. st. jerome s hospital. hey, slow down! the first stage of labor can take hours. yeah, so can midtown traffic. the wife of a plumber. we re going to have a bunch of little plumbers. and the horrible part is, he s too good for me. we
and foreign aggression, the advisory stating individuals who advocate both for and against abortion have encouraged violence. primary nights in multiple states, keeping a close eye on races in california including the recall effort to oust san francisco district attorney jessica den, and what that effort could mean for other progressive prosecutors in cities all across the country including los angeles and new york, and matthew mcconaughey sat down with our own bret baier on special repors visit to washington and find common ground on gun and school safety reform following the deadly shooting in his hometown of uvalde, texas. we will pilot you don t want to miss from that conversation, but we begin with just what we are getting in a few hours, new opinions from the u.s. supreme court. could they include the big one we are waiting on that has the department of homeland security on alert tonight? house correspondent kevin corke has all the details. warning of a height and e
to that day including all the violence and chaos that happened in this building behind me. the idea that all of this was just a demonstration that got a little bit out of control is absurd. live from london, this is cnn newsroom with max foster. it is tuesday, june 7, boris johnson is clinging to his leadership after a closer than expected confidence vote in parliament. uk lawmakers are angry that the prime minister attended numerous parties while the rest of the country was under covid lockdown. mr. johnson will meet his cabinet today to lay out his vision, he says he wants to continue delivering on the issues that matter to british people. i m grateful to colleagues, i m grateful for the support they have given me. of course i understand what we need to do now is come together as a government, as a party, and that is exactly what we can now do. but it won t be that easy for the prime minister who only has a year to turn around his declining popularity, if that. do