well, it s tuesday, september 13th. it is 9 a.m. here in london where in just a matter of hours the late queen elizabeth ii will make her final trip back here to buckingham palace being honored in what was an emotional farewell in scotland. in london the queen s coffin will remain at buckingham palace behind me here before it is moved to westminster hall on wednesday and there she will lie in state until her funeral next monday. well, ahead of that, preparations have been underway overnight. soldiers here seen rehearsing for the queen s funeral procession. correspondents are fanned out. isa soares standing by outside saint charles cathedral. we are joined here outside buckingham palace. to both of you, thank you very much, indeed, for joining us. let me start with you, isa. and it has been certainly a long day in scotland yesterday and a long evening as people cued to pay their last respect to the queen whose body lies in a casket at saint charles cathedral. what have people
investigating the insurrection. and remembering the queen. the coffin will be taken to buk in london. right now king charles and the queen consort are in northern island as thousands pay tribute to the queen. we ll take you there live. and another story we continue to follow. ukrainian forces taking back more and more their territory. president zelenskyy said his country has reca recaptured 230 miles of land. this highlighting how quickly they were able to push out russian occupiers. russia is fighting back. launching heavy shelling that knocked out power in the city of kharkiv this morning. let s begin with the latest from ukraine. melissa bell filed this report from inside of kharkiv. there was a very clever communication about the counter offensive in the south. ahead of its beginning on the 29th of august. and then just about a week ago, the beginning of that eastern counter offensive up here in kharkiv that appears to have wrong-footed russian forces. but there is al
the lightning advanced that ukraine is making in reclaiming territory seized by russian forces. today president zelenskyy said his military has liberated 2300 square miles since the beginning of this month. while it is not really possible to verify these exact numbers and these images of ukrainian flags being raised in several villages in the east and the south. they re circulating widely. we re also following big economic news happening as we speak. u.s. stocks down sharply at this hour. following new inflation data. we ll have much more on all of that in a moment. but let s begin with stan kylely live in kharkiv. what is the latest? reporter: well the latest is that in spite of this very rapid and success advance, 6,000 kilometers captured in the north or recaptured in the north and south of the country, the russians have hit back. they ve hit back by taking out the power supplies in kharkiv province. it is power cut here in kharkiv city. but i could say, also, that it
$90,000 per year says this has created financial hardship for them. carley: americans are optimistic about falling gas prices and people feel better about the economy. kevin corke has more on the white house victory lap. good morning. kevin: to hear the white house, the president has taken america from crisis to resurgence and that is the message he will float later today at 3 p.m. to hype the inflation reduction act. president biden: do we need to sell the house? do we need to skip payments on the car? can we afford to send the kids to college? inflation reduction act is a god send. it will save people one prostate cancer drug $6000 a year. thousands of women are taking breast cancer treatment. we will see the savings. kevin: for all the back slapping, analysts point out that the biden students loan give away will eat up progress on inflation. the student debt cancellation announced by the biden administration will cost $500 billion over 10 years, under our estimate,
documents seized from his mar-a-lago home. carley: ripping the probe as unprecedented and misguided. brooke singman joins us live. good morning. brooke: the justice department signing off on one of two candidateings to overview the review of records seized from mar-a-lago. the doj said it would allow raymond deary to review the material, writing deary along with two original nominees have substantial judicial experience during which they presided over federal criminal and civil cases involving national security and privilege concern. deary nominated by former president ronald reagan back in 1986 and served on u.s. district court for new york until 2011, then served another seven years on the u.s. foreign intelligence surveillance court. he was one judge who approved investigation into former trump advisor carter page and ties to the russian government. clearing the way by florida judge cannon, who will have the final say. trump s legal team still rejecting the doj request