Here. Nastia is sailing ships, she says. Ukraine has been at war all the eight years shes known. I think it will be better without them, she says. It was uncomfortable having them here. Her parents nearby say fear meant their slept in their clothes all the six months. Its kind of strange here to see how almost unaffected so much of this town has been and how life seems to have slipped comfortably back into normal when the russians just picked up and left. And it gives you a feeling of how normality must still reign just a matter of six kilometers away from the border in russia. But normal is never coming back, particularly to here, the borderline itself. Russia retreated back over it but must now live with the hatred it has stirred. The fact that Ukrainian Forces are able to push right up to here, the beginning of the Border Buffer Zone with russia, russia is just a matter of kilometers in that direction, is yet another Calamity Moscow has imposed upon itself. Its opponent in this war
did i gloat? there was a little bit of gloating. he did send a video, too. the play calling was not great, it was a struggle for alabama. you guys had referees on your team. you had extra men on the field. thanks for watching. congratulations. go, tigers. cnn newsroom starts right now. good monday morning to you, i m jim sciutto. and i m erica hill. polls open around the country in less than 24 hours and right now candidates trying to take advantage of those final moments, making their final pitch to voters, hanging in the balance of course is control of congress. entering the midterms democrats have just the slimmest of majorities in both chambers and that leaves pretty much all outcomes on the table. just a reminder here in the house all 435 seats on the ballot in the senate you have 35 seats up for grabs. 36 states will also be voting for governor. it s a big election. interest in the midterms has been high from coast to coast. more than 30 million pre-el
it is the top of the hour on cnn newsroom. good afternoon, everyone. it s good to have you. election day, it s tomorrow, and the biggest names in both politics both political parties i should say are crisscrossing the kucountry in frenetic pitch to get out the vote. republicans believe they ll have what it takes to regain the house. all 435 house seats are up for grabs. 35 senate seats also on the ballot. control of that chamber is anyone s guess at this point, plus three dozen governor seats will be decided, and scores of other state and local positions. let s start in wisconsin and cnn s lucy kavanaugh. republican senator ron johnson fighting to hold onto his seat from mandela barnes, the lieutenant governor there. how are they making these final pitches to voters? reporter: that s right, victor. there is a close race for the governor as well, but all eyes on the senate race. the outcome of which could determine the balance of power in congress. we have two-term
earlier this morning two buses full of migrants arrived in washington, d.c., from texas. texas governor greg abbott ordered that the migrants be dropped off on vice president harris doorstep at her residence at the naval observatory. governor abbott and governor ducey of arizona already bussed thousands of migrants to other states in recent weeks. also today, florida governor ron desantis proudly claims he chartered two flights to bring 50 migrants from texas to martha s vineyard in massachusetts. there were seven families on those planes, including children. if this was his idea of a solution to the migrant issues, you would think that the governor would have alerted the governor of massachusetts to this. but these plane loads of migrants reported arrived without any warning to local officials who scrambled to set them up at a local church. here s how desantis sees it. we re not a sanctuary state, and it s better to be able to go to a sanctuary jurisdiction. yes, we will
here. nastia is sailing ships, she says. ukraine has been at war all the eight years she s known. i think it will be better without them, she says. it was uncomfortable having them here. her parents nearby say fear meant their slept in their clothes all the six months. it s kind of strange here to see how almost unaffected so much of this town has been and how life seems to have slipped comfortably back into normal when the russians just picked up and left. and it gives you a feeling of how normality must still reign just a matter of six kilometers away from the border in russia. but normal is never coming back, particularly to here, the borderline itself. russia retreated back over it but must now live with the hatred it has stirred. the fact that ukrainian forces are able to push right up to here, the beginning of the border buffer zone with russia, russia is just a matter of kilometers in that direction, is yet another calamity moscow has imposed upon itself. its oppo