about our children or us. stand for against us. because we re not going nowhere. dozens of devastated and furious members of the uvalde community lashed out at the school board, demanding new leadership and the firing of the school district s police chief. the contentious meeting came after the release of a damning report and dramatic police body cam video. meanwhile on capitol hill, two trump white house officials will testify in thursday s prime time hearing by the january 6th committee, as the panel shifts its focus to the three hours of inaction by former president trump, during the insurrection. and over in the senate, joe manchin is trying to save face. he s now claiming that he has not written off any key parts of president biden s domestic jaebd. we ll have the latest on where the negotiations stand. good morning, and welcome to way too early on this tuesday, july 19th. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for being with us. we start with the latest on the january 6th in
today. the alerts stretching from the west to the midwest, and added parts of the northeast. heat advisory starts tomorrow. boston, philadelphia, same story as well. we re going to see temperatures soaring once again into the upper 90s, and triple digits, and 109 today in dallas, and you factor in the humidity, it s going to feel like 110, and feel like 109 in little rock and feeling like 101 in st. louis. and it will feel like near 100 degrees in minneapolis. and same story tomorrow, the problem is we re not getting a relief, we re not getting the relief at night and temperatures in the 90s in dallas and we re looking at temperatures near 100 degrees in phoenix so you re waking up to the temperatures, and then they re just climbing from there, so tomorrow, 95 in richmond and a heat index of 100, and that s what it feels like on your body and same story in new york city, the heat index of 98 degrees. and we re going to see a stretch of 90s in boston and philadelphia and into dc, and it
time now for business. and for that, let s bring in cnbc s joumanna bercetche who joins us live from sweltering london. hope you re keeping cool. we have futures slightly positive this morning after a stock rally on wall street lost some steam yesterday. what s pulling the numbers down? and what s the early outlook today? that s right. so the first, the start of the day is pretty positive for wall street indices but they were dragged lower by the end of the day by some of the key banking stocks in the index. earnings results of bank of america and merrill and goldman sachs and even though they announced that results were better than analyst expectations, the message was a little bit of a concern for the growth outlook for the second half of the year, and especially some comments around inflation
every other company has come under pressure in the last couple of years because of the pandemic and people are now moving to work from home, and the customer activity and because of inflation, and rising costs. as it stands, starbucks has a thousand stores in the u.k., 75% of which are franchises, so it could have some effects throughout the area. and the two of you will have to find another place for your caffeine. there is tea. you are living in london. cnbc s joumanna bercetche, we appreciate it. stay cool over. there still ahead here, the country s most infectious disease doctor makes a decision about his future. meanwhile some public health officials are taking a different approach to the latest covid surge. we will discuss all of that with dr. patel when way too early comes back. t with dr . patel when way too early comes back