right now in the senate. but over in the house, speaker johnson says that bill is dead on arrival. if new reports about the terms of the deal are, in fact, true, welcome to fox news live i m aishah hasnie griff good to be with you. from eagle pass to the white house we have a busy saturday. this comes as former president trump calls on states to sending their national guards to assist texas along the southern border. we have fox team coverage with matt eagle pass where the standoff between texas and the biden administration is ramping up. but let s begin with lucas tomlinson at the white house on new details we re learning about this senate border deal. hey, lucas. griff, election year politics will factor heavily into the fate of the senate border bill to put it mildly as you mention aishah mentioned and donald trump doesn t support it here s tennessee senator marsha blackburn. the president could close that border if he wanted to close the border. he will not close th
russia s brutal invasion enters its second year, president biden sends more aid to ukraine. it s worth fighting for for as long as it takes. and as u.s. intelligence shows china considering lethal aid to russia, how will the white house react? i ll speak to national security adviser jake sullivan next, and united front. the gop, announces its first presidential debate as a host of candidates consider joining the race, but can they all agree to come together in the end? republican national committee chair rona mcdaniel will be here exclusively. plus common goal. in a bitterly divided house. we ve got our work cut out for us. two lawmakers from across the aisle are coming together to try to help families across the country. hello. i m dana bash in washington, where the state of our union is wondering how long this can go on. this week, russia s brutal invasion of ukraine entered its second year and ukrainian leaders say russian forces marked the anniversary wi
democracy. the president made the comments against an eerie blood red background complete with marines on guard at philadelphia s independence hall. critics say it is the hyper divisive president and his progressive agenda that are the real threats to the country. now the president seems to be backing off a bit. white house correspondent peter doocy takes a look at the address and the fallout. good evening, peter. peter: good evening, mike. the president s argument is basically that he thinks the united states can have a democracy or maga republicans. but not both. so i asked him today whether or not that applies to all 74 million americans who backed trump in 2020 and his answer was very revealing. this is not unusual, right? to have a to have a speech like this. peter: that speech a warning about so-called maga republicans. they promote authoritarian leaders and fan the flames of political violence that are a threat to our personal rights. peter: but the preside
affidavit could compromise the ongoing criminal investigation. it s been eight days since that unprecedented fbi action and we know that doj filter teams have combed through at least some of the contents retrieved from trump s home. we know this because doj returned trump s passports, three of them, in fact, that were found among the materials that were taken away by the fbi. we ve been tracking all of this for the past week. katelyn, what can we expect to happen at this hearing on thursday that has been called by that florida judge? reporter: alex, this hearing is going to be all about secrecy, and especially the arguments that the justice department is going to make to keep secret this very important document that backed up that search of mar-a-lago last monday. remember, that document, it s an afte affidavit. it s only been seen by the judge so far outside of prosecutors and investigators. and it s a narrative that would detail everything that has happened in this invest
are release video surveillance of the search. uphill battle for liz cheney, voters in wyoming go to the polls on primary day, robert costa is the only correspondent dl as the congresswoman casts her votes withance a country we are facing challenging and difficult times. o donnell: the staggering number of americans who are unhappy at work. this job is not fun and we re not getting paid enough to deal with the stuff he with have to deal with every single day. o donnell: cbs s elise preston on why that is costing companies trillions of dollars. this is the this is the cbs evening news with norah o donnell, reporting from the nation s capital. good evening, thank you for joining us on this tuesday night. we begin tonight with severe water cuts that will impact tens of millions of americans. and puts a fine point on how dire the crisis is in america s west. a mega drought is drying up the colorado river and depleting the nation s largest manmade reservoir laker mead.