in spirit. plus, celebrating orthodox christmas in ukraine. no cease-fire, but new american firepower heads to the front lines. i m ian lee in kyiv with ukraine being promised heavy weapons that the pentagon says can change the battlefield. weekend journal, a minnesota cancer survivor pays it back by sharing her hair. wow! and later, double duty on capitol hill. the four-day stalemate complicated lives and child care. challenging, but it s been fun. announcer: this is the cbs weekend news from chicago with adriana diaz. good evening. it took 15 ballots and heated moments, but tonight congress finally has a new house speaker. kevin mccarthy won early this morning, putting an end to days of raucous debate and a historic standoff with emboldened hard-line republicans. the gop s strife playing out for all to see and ending with arm twisting, flaring tempers and phone calls from former president donald trump. cbs christina ruffini leads us off with what happen
she has an important job, and we always said that, you know, she wouldn t the mom wouldn t be the default parent. gomez. reporter: so gomez and 4-month-old hodge got some father/son bonding time on the house floor fitting bottle-feeds and naps in between votes and mastering quick diaper changes in the democratic cloakroom where he bonded with fellow dads in congress. i hope that it sends a positive message where dads need to do their part. you know, the mom shouldn t be the one that automatically has to give up their career in order for the family schedule to work out. reporter: a message he hopes can get majority support. you got this. reporter: caitlin huey-burns, cbs news, washington. yes, a message we should all agree on. that is the cbs weekend news for this saturday. later on cbs 48 hours with new reporting on the idaho student murders. i m adriana diaz in chicago. good night.
Imagine going to somebody and saying would you like to officiate a kids game, and you might have profanity showered on you and you may get beat up after the game. brian: they didn t like the call. the mom wouldn t shut up. he through the mom out. he met her in the parking lot and punched her out and broke her eye socket. when you see the parents, what are you noticing. sometimes it s like they are living through their child. they are trying to accomplish everything they didn t with their child. last as a parent of athletes, and as a coach of athletes, i can see why they get so amped up about the game. but what keeps the game
Imagine going to somebody and saying would you like to officiate a kids game, and you might have profanity showered on you and you may get beat up after the game. brian: they didn t like the call. the mom wouldn t shut up. he through the mom out. he met her in the parking lot and punched her out and broke her eye socket. when you see the parents, what are you noticing. sometimes it s like they are living through their child. they are trying to accomplish everything they didn t with their child. last as a parent of athletes, and as a coach of athletes, i can see why they get so amped up about the game. but what keeps the game
Imagine going to somebody and saying would you like to officiate a kids game, and you might have profanity showered on you and you may get beat up after the game. brian: they didn t like the call. the mom wouldn t shut up. he through the mom out. he met her in the parking lot and punched her out and broke her eye socket. when you see the parents, what are you noticing. sometimes it s like they are living through their child. they are trying to accomplish everything they didn t with their child. last as a parent of athletes, and as a coach of athletes, i can see why they get so amped up about the game. but what keeps the game