pushing cases. i will speak with one of those theories ahead. later, men are major developments in uvalde texas. in the wake of the massacre at robb elementary, but why did it take so long? i will speak with the former mayor of san antonio, about that and more. a good sunday morning to you all. happy fourth of july. i am katie fang. this morning american airlines bounced back from a holiday travel nightmare. a glitch in the scheduling platform, drop power to stop thousands of flights for the month. it says, it has resorted most of the flights. it s the latest addition to summer travel stress. from weekends of severe storms, getting on to a flight from almost any airline, has been a hassle. maggie vespa is live for us at chicago s o hare international with the latest. maggie? he katie good morning. we ve been talking for weeks now for headaches about hairlines. this feels like a migraine for american hairlines. basically a glitch in the airline schedule the platform, allow
leaves abortion a question for each state to settle. that heads up if you will by no means makes this day any less consequential. justice samuel aleto says roe was egregious from the start. in a joint rebuttal the court s three liberals wrote this, with sorrow for this court but more for the many ill-man s american women who today have lost a fundamental constitutional protection, we dissent. the impact nationwide will be limit. the role reversal was the goal, of course, of a decades long conservative campaign to tilt the courts their way. the three trump appointees to the high court, the culmination of that. now a new legal chapter unfolds state by state as does a new political fight. we ll hear from president biden shortly. and nancy pelosi vows make abortion now the big deal in the campaign. reporter: the supreme court here issuing its most consequential decision in decades holding there s no longer a federal constitutional right to get an abortion and now handing the is
region. we ll get a live report from kyiv. this afternoon the house january 6th committee will hold its fifth public hearing on what it has learned so far about the attack on the u.s. capitol. today s hearing will focus on how former president trump tried to use the justice department to help him overturn the results of the 2020 election but failed because of pushback and resignation threats, like this one from former acting deputy attorney general, richard donahue. the president said, suppose i do this, suppose i replace him, jeff rossen, with him, jeff clark. what do you do? i said, sir, i would resign immediately. there is no way i m serving one minute under this guy, jeff clark. donaghue will testify today as well as steve engel. adam kinzinger, one of two republicans on the panel, will lead today s questioning. committee chairman, bennie thompson, says the panel will wait until later next month to hold more hearings because it needs to look through new evidence it
prosecutor in new york, and senior fbi official chuck rosenberg. pete, for those just joining us, walk us through this decision and what it means for americans. this is the first time in american history that the supreme court has ever said what part of the second amendment means when it talks about the right to keep and to bear arms. 14 years ago, in a decision here involving a gun owner here in washington, d.c., the court said the key part it protects the right to keep a gun at home for self-defense. now the court has said that the and bear arms part extends the second amendment outside the home. the new york law said that you can get a license to get a concealed carry permit, only if you can show some heightened or special need. basically, what the supreme court says today is, that turns a constitutional right into something that you have to qualify for, and that s not how the constitution works. this will affect new york and it will affect half a dozen other states th
suspect and that former corrections officer moments after they crash. what former officer vicky white said before authorities say she took her life. the economy tonight. the numbers on inflation showing alarming dynamics still at play. but the question, have we reached the peak? with record high gas prices and what president biden announced today when it comes to farmers. the war in ukraine. and tonight, u.s. defense secretary lloyd austin now warning vladimir putin an attack on nato allies is, quote, a fight he really doesn t want to have. ian pannell on ukraine again tonight. the dire new warning on climate. warning more than 2 billion people around the world will face water scarcity, including 160 million children. matt gutman reporting from kenya tonight. the white house this evening calling for an investigation into the shooting death of a palestinian american journalist, killed while covering a rai by the israeli military in the west bank. and here at home, th