governor roy cooper said last night in his broadcast would turn the clock back 50 years for women. he vetoed the republican passed measure which could ban abortion after 12 weeks and impose other limitations making it harder to get even before that 12-week period. this afternoon the state senate overrode his veto, so now we re waiting to hear from the house where this all could hinge on a single vote. cnn s diane gallagher in raleigh for us tonight. where does the governor s veto stand now? reporter: as we speak the north carolina house is debating over this bill, senate bill 20 and whether or not they ll override that veto. a little earlier today after about an hour debate in the senate they chose and passed that veto override in a party 30-20 vote. that was the first part of this two-part process. this is when it gets tricky here because it s a numbers game. in order to override the veto in the house after this particular debate happening right now, they need to have thre
and now more than a year into the war they most certainly can t at least not yet, anderson. sam kylie, appreciate it. be careful. throughout the war we ve turned to retired army four star general wesley clark for insight. he s also a former nato supreme allied commander. general clark, you ve seen the news out of ukraine. what does it say it you about the effectiveness of the patriot systems versus russia s hypersonic systems because they ve been touted as being nearly impossible to intercept. that s what mr. putin said, but it turns out the patriot can intercept a hypersonic missile. after all the patriot was designed to intercept ballistic missiles that were coming. the patriot has the radar, the guidance system, and the energy in the missile to be able to strike an incoming hypersonic missile. do you know how large russia s supply of hypersonic missiles is? can it afford to keep using them in waves of attacks?
probably they have multiple aumgs at this stage. so, anderson, the counter offensive probably under way right now. we re just not seeing it, and they re doing reconnaissance, and of course they re attacking the logistics and they re trying to prevent the redeployment of russian forces by selective strikes. we re seeing just the beginning of that with the storm shadow missiles that the u.k. has provided, so it looks to me like the opening stage of four months of counter offensive. wesley clark, appreciate your time, thank you. thank you very much. next tonight a serious security breach involving an intruder getting into and out of the home of president biden s national security adveezer somehow without his secret service agents on his round the clock detail you ve been noticing. also the very latest on talks to head off the possible calamity over the debt ceiling, the former treasury secretary larry summers helping us
lost their lives. thank you. coming up next, we ll have more from jake tapper s conversation with volodymyr zelenskyy. the impact as he sees it of the sinking of russia s black sea flagship. the moskva. later, we ll ask retired army four star general wesley clark to weigh in on the military significance of ukraine s achievement, as well as what russian retaliation might look like. .but you can find her, and millions of other tatalend pros, right now on upwork. [inspirational soul music] [inspiraonal soul music] [inspirational soul music]
we ll talk about the impact on the war that could have. it is significant with retired army four star general wesley clark. also tonight, even as russia intensifies its attack on the east, we are learning more about the did he agree of atrocities. the national police staying bodies of more than 900 civilians, 900, have been recovered in the kyiv area just in the days since russian forces retreated. in his address to his country tonight, he told ukrainians, and these are his words, maybe you somewhere in russia cruelty is respected. but in ukraine, it is despised and punished. even in places under russian bombardment, that cruelty is being eased by neighbors bravely helping neighbors. last night, clarissa ward brought us a story of an 86-year-old woman named lydia. i want to show you a portion. her report with a warning, it is