before the u.s. defaults. not everyone is confident a deal can be reached, with at least one top republican negotiator warning a deal could come together as soon as today or fall apart entirely. what is the mood on capitol hill right now? reporter: good afternoon. the mood is more optimistic than we ve heard in days. negotiators here this morning are saying they think they re closing in on a deal and really it s all about having an agreement on the agreement and hashing out the remaining sticking points, which we re told are on work requirements and spending caps. we heard speaker mccarthy came to the capitol shortly before 10:30 a.m. this morning. he says he feels more confident than he has and they ve made progress, but some sticking points remain. i asked him if he thinks he would be able to get his full conference behind whatever deal they re able to strike, and he said he does think that will happen. he also said he thinks a deal could potentially come together as earl
fargo, bank of america, jm morgan, morgan stanley lost $50 billion in market value in one day. that s a hit. on the other hand, those banks still exist. you can t say that for silicon valley bank. svb has gone under completely. that makes the second biggest bank failure in the history of this country. and the significant svb financed nearly half of all venture-backed healthcare companies in the united states. it held significant cash reserves for some of the biggest crip toe currencies. it s gone. federal regulators have rename it and taken it over. that means a lot of people lost a lotf of money. most of that money was not insured, no matter what they tell you. the fdic only guarantees bank deposits up to $250,000. nearly 90% of all deposits at svb exceeded that. and it s unclear if those people see their money again. in fact, when customers show up in svb s branch in manhattan to get the deposits back, managers called the police. so, what we have there is the 1929-style b
attacks. benjamin hall was working around the clock to bring all of us real information on the ground. more on the ground is in kyiv tonight, the capital ukraine, fox s home, benjamin hall, benjamin, what s going on tonight? well, sean, you would have to look back today and see what we ve seen is a continuation, if not an escalation of what we ve seen over the last week. increasing number of attacks on civilian areas. an attempt to get humanitarian aid in the surrounded cities and the inability for people to get out of them. just a few days later, on march 14, hall was on a fact-finding mission on the outskirts of ukraine with two other journalists, pierre and sasha when they were viciously attacked by russian forces. pierre and sasha was killed and hall was left fighting for his life. here s jennifer griffin. a word about our colleagues, the loss and pain we feel is enormous, but if ever there was a time that the world needed journalist reporters risking their lives
dissent? we had three of us writing a dissent. we thought it was for many, many reasons harmful to the court and we thought for many reasons it was generally a harmful decision. we thought it was wrong and five people thought it was right. so the truthful answer is, at this moment i don t know exactly. there are people who spend a lot of time on this matter. i can say it is a very important thing, this right to abortion, and i think casey is a better opinion from a legal point of view than roe, and i am very, very, very sorry. thank you for watching. you can catch my full interviews with bernie sanders and carol burnett anytime you want on hbo max. and join us here on cnn every friday night to find out who s talking next. good evening, everyone. i m allison, welcome to cnn tonight. it s friday night. the culture wars are in full swing. there is a plot television. in the republican-controlled state legislatures of south carolina and nebraska restrictive abortion bills
attacks. benjamin hall was working around the clock to bring all of us real information on the ground. more on the ground is in kyiv tonight, the capital ukraine, fox s home, benjamin hall, benjamin, what s going on tonight? well, sean, you would have to look back today and see what we ve seen is a continuation, if not an escalation of what we ve seen over the last week. increasing number of attacks on civilian areas. an attempt to get humanitarian aid in the surrounded cities and the inability for people to get out of them. just a few days later, on march 14, hall was on a fact-finding mission on the outskirts of ukraine with two other journalists, pierre and sasha when they were viciously attacked by russian forces. pierre and sasha was killed and hall was left fighting for his life. here s jennifer griffin. a word about our colleagues, the loss and pain we feel is enormous, but if ever there was a time that the world needed journalist reporters risking their lives