In each time zone and vote for any candidate other than mr putin or spoil their ballot papers. The Rolling Protest has been dubbed noon against putin. One of the main issues that voters are thinking about, is the war in ukraine. On that, here are two voters from an area just north of moscow. I wish this special operation would end as soon as possible. It is a pity people are dying, she says. Can you imagine how many people died, and now ourfront line regions are suffering . I am an elderly person but im really worried about this. I came to vote for a man who does everything to ensure there is no war in the world, this man says, that our country lives and prospers and that there is no fascism in any country, not in ukraine or any other part of the world. Our russia editor, Steve Rosenberg is in moscow and gave his assessment of the calls from kremlin critics for protests across russia. This was an idea that was proposed by russian Opposition Figures abroad in exile, it was supported by
hello, and thank you so much for being here. it is 10:00 eastern. i m ana cabrera reporting from new york, and this morning underwater sounds detected in the desperate search for the missing titan submersible. with more assets rushing to the search zone with time running out, the five on board believed to only have one day of oxygen left. the latest on that urgent race against the clock. plus, powell in the hot seat, the fed chair appearing before a house committee this hour. what s his next move with fears of a recession still looming? and later, new reaction from the attorney general to that plea deal for the president s son hunter biden. i would leave this matter in the hands of the united states attorney who want appointed by the previous president. this hour how that deal could impact the 2024 landscape with the gop front runner under indictment himself. let s begin with the underwater noises in that urgent search for the missing titan submersible and the five pe
opening statements set to begin. fox agreeing to pay dominion over $787 million, avoiding one of the biggest media trials in decades. what the two sides are saying tonight. just breaking, a parking garage collapsing in downtown manhattan. one person is dead and five injured. inside the urgent rescue operation under way. also tonight, the kansas city homeowner charged with shooting a black teen who mistakenly rang his doorbell surrenders and posts bail. the 84-year-old suspect telling police he thought someone was trying to break into his house. the 16-year-old s classmates rallying around him. and another shooting at the wrong address. a man who opened fire on a car that accidently drove into his driveway, charged with murder after killing a 20-year-old woman. the american reporter appearing in a russian courtroom accused of spying, charges the u.s. is blasting as baseless. and the surprise announcement. buffalo bills safety damar hamlin cleared to play again after
firefighter or any of you in this room. so my plan is to make sure that corporations begin to pay their fair share. president joe biden pitches his budget proposal that he says will lift the burden off families across america. we ll explain, though, why this plan is more about campaign messaging than the actual numbers. plus, there are significant new developments that signal that donald trump could soon face criminal charges in the state of new york. and also ahead we ll dig into the cia s latest assessment of vladimir putin and the future of the war in ukraine. good morning and will welcome to way too early on this friday, march 10th. we re going to begin with the strongest indication yet prosecutors are nearing an indictment of former president donald trump. the new york times reports that the manhattan district attorney s office has now signaled to attorneys for the former president that he could face criminal charges. the paper cites four people with knowledge
investigation into the january 6th committee. also ahead, ron desantis tries to debunk what he calls myths about his education policy, but his presentation of the facts seem to fall flat. we ll show you what happened. we ll have legal analysis on the doj s report on the louisville police department. a lot to get to. along with joe, willie and me, we have columnist and associate editor for the washington post, david ignatius. for usa today, susan page. and the host of way too early, white house bureau chief at politico, jonathan lemire. we have a lot to get to, mika. first, i just love to hear you talk a little bit about what happened last night. yesterday, of course, iconic interviews with really women who made a huge difference over the past 50 years. but that day of iconic interviews turned into an evening of really history-making speeches. i must say, at times, just speeches that took your breath away, made the audience members cry. it was extraordinary.